Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-05-09 - Orange Coast Pilotllissi,.ger Sees B..,,. . . Mesa Poliee Make I Itlassive Deroin Bust; 6 Arrested DAILY PILOT * * * 10' * * * • TUESDAY AFTERNOON , MAY 9, 1972° VOL '5, NO. 1JL J SECTIONS, "4 "AGES a1 CHINA .. Major Cnwlc•••r• u,, ,...__ MAP INDICATES SEA AND. RAIL LINKS ORDERED CUT President Moves to Hilt North Vi1tn1m W1r Supplies Entrances to Haiphong Sealed Off by Mines SAIGON (AP) -The biggest U.S. air and naval task force ever assembled in Vietnam began mining the entrances to Haiphong and other North Vietnamese ports today and heavil.Y bombar~ed railroads and highways Jn North Viet- nam. The U.S. Command reported one North RELATED STORIES PAGE 4 TODAY Vietnamese 1'1IG jet shot down during the mining operation. the seventh f\.l!G reported downed in four days. The command said the initial phases of the blockade announced by President Nixon Monday night '1have been suc- cessfully accomplished" and the Navy planes that dropped the delayed-action mines to seal off the enemy's harbors all returned safely to their carriers. But the commander of a cruiser~ destroyer fl-0tllla in the Tonkin Gulf, Rear Adm. Rtmbrandt C. Robinson, was killed Monday night and his chle£ of staff and bis operatklns officer were missing when their helicopter developed engine trouble ,. and crashed as they were trying lo land aboatd the cruiser Providence. Robinson, 47, was the first admiral to die in the Vietnam war. The Navy said it marshaled a fortt of at least 60 shiiM -including flve aircraft carriers with 350-400 warplanes, four cruisers and 30 destroyers -to mine 111 entrances to North Vietnamese ports, to cut off the delivery of war materials through the territorial waters of North Vietna m. and to sever rail and other communication lines ashore. ~fore ships were on the way, l~ludlng the carrier Saratoga from the Atlantic Fleet. She was expected within a week. The 7th Air Force has more than 500 strike planes flying from bases In Thailand and South Vietnam. U.S. Command spokesmen 11\d air strikes continued oVer North Vletnam to- day. Tbey gave no detail• ol lbe .i.,•1 operations but said 1tlack1 tn the North nearly doubled during the put -t to an average of about 200 1trifts 1 dly. American planes returned to the JIMoil area Monday for lbe !~It time Ill U.. weeks .. Tbe aerial mining ol 11aJP>onc ..,.. (Seo lllNEI, r.., 11 I I Heroin Seized Peking Repor 2 China Ships Attacked by U TOKYO (AP) -1'wo ~ anchored In North -were "brazenl1 and rtpnitHlf~Oett.tiiO by U.S. planes and .,.....,. - ••eekend, Pekinc 11id bl 1 br11•• Jy Wednesday. The broadcast, carT)1nc a a&I' 'T •" the Cbin.,. Foreip lllnbUJ,,... Chinese crew rntmbtn m civilians •"°"111 lhe .ia,. wn and both ships wtrt tni r_ lfJ It said the obiPI --· Ngu hland, Np All ... ...... The 1tatCl!l<ftt .... ..._ ..constitutes a p11 ,.,, 1 11• lhe Chinne ............ - U.S. gov.,.,.,.,.. -ill act ., ....... _ .. Olin<s<IMr<ltool ... ... re<UmJIC< ., .... l t Ci •• Othenri.tt. b -··=·~ .. ::::-:::: !or all the "''" o Uwnft•." ,,,. ai.. ... ~.!"=' .. 8::. u~ .:.ft~~ .. ::~:;~: ~- • ·issinger Sees_ Buss Su111111 ·it -· Mesa Poli~e Make Peking Reports • :tlass ve Deroin 2 Chinese Ships Bust; 6 Arrested Atta~ked by U.S . DAILY PILOT * * * 1oc * * * TUESDAY AFTERNOON, MAY 9, 1972 \'OL. U, HO, 130, 3 SECTIONS, 44 ,AGES CHINA 0 i •o MILES U,I MfWNllll' MAP INDICATES SEA AND RAIL LINKS ORDERED CUT President Moves to Halt North Vietn1m W1r Supplies Entrances to Haiphong Sealed Off by Mines SAIGON (AP) -The biggest U.S. air and nav<il ta sk force ever assembled in Vietnam began n1ining the entrances to Haiphong and other North Vietnamese ports today a~d heavil_y bombar~ed railroads and highways 1n North Viet- nam. The U.S. Command reported one North RELATED STORIES PAGE 4 TODAY Vietnamese ~11G jet shot down durin g the mining operation, the seventh f\1IG reported downed in four days. The command SBild the Initial phases ot the blockade announced by President Nlx:on Monday night "have been suc- cessfully accomplished " and the Navy planes that dropped the delayed·action mineS to seal orr the enemy's harbors all returned safely to their carriers. But the com mander of 3 crulser-- "1 destroyer no ti Ila in the Tonkin Gulf, Rear Adm . Rembr11 ndt C. Robinscn, was killM ·Monday night 11nd his chief cf stare and his cperatlons officer were missing when lhelr helicopter developed engine trouble and crashed as they were trying to land aboard the cruiser1Providence. Robinson, 47, was the first admiral to die in the Vietnam war. The Navy said it marshaled a force or at least 60 ships -including five aircraft carriers with 350-400 warplanes, four cruisers and 30 destroyers -to mine all entrances to North Vietnamese ports, to cut off the delivery of war materials through the territorial waters of North Vietnam. and to sever rail and olher communication lines ashore. ~1ore ships were on the way, including the carrier Saratoga from the Atlantic Fleet. She was expected within a week. The 7th Air Force has more than 500 strike plane! nying from bases in Thailand and South Vielnam. U.S. Command spokesmen said air strikes continued over North Vietnam tcr day. They gave no delaiis of the day't operations but said attacks In the North nearly doubled during the past week to an average of about 200 strikes a day. American planes returned to the Hanol arta ~tonday for the first time' In three weeks, '!be aerial mining of llalphon1 cen- (S.0 MINES, P•ge I) I ' • a1n on . ' Major Crackdown Heroin Suspects • Seized Ill Mesa By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of tM o.nr Plltt s11tt Striking swiftly to intercept an unex· pected shipment. Costa Mesa police and federal narcotics agents claim they seized 39 ounces of high-grade heroin worth $250,000 Monday night and cap- tured six suspected smugglers. Investigators claim the potent opiate was distributed to Orange CoWlty addicts through legitimate business fronts in· eluding two Mexican ca!es,. ille .Pink.Ap- ple Produce Company and a glass firm . One suspect booked lnto city jail early today, as a result, was no stranger to the premises. He . won the contract in 1967 to· install jail safety glass and other Costa Mesa Police Facility windows, narcotics detec· tives noted. The arrestees taken into custody at their firms and homes about 10 p.m. were Peking Reports 2 China Ships Attacked by U.S. TOKYO {AP) -Two Chinese ships anchored in North Vietnamese waters were "brazenly and repeatedly attacked" by U.S. planes and warships over the weekend, Peking said in a broadcast ear· ly Wednesda y. The broadcast , carrying a statement by the Chinese Foreign Ministry, said some Chinese crew members and Vietnamese civilians aboard the ships were wounded and both ships were seriously damaged. It said the ships were anchored off Non Ngu Island, Nghe An Province. The statement said the incident uconstitutes a grave provocation against the Chinese people" and added : "The U.S. government must immediately stop its act or provocation of attacking Chinese merchant "ships and prevent the recurrence of similar in c Iden ts. Otherwise, it must bear full responsibility for all the grave constquences arising therefrom." The Chinese news agency said three U.S. wars hips fired ''many shells" on the two vessels the evening of May 6. The following day around noon "many U.S. aircraft bombed and slrafed" the ships. '!be news •gency added the ships w•u again attacked by "many" U.S. planes · the afternoon Of May I. scheduled for arraignment today before a U.S. Commissioner in Los Angeles. No bail was to be set until they we re formally brought before the bench on charges of violating federal narcotiCl!I laws. Agents of the Federal Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs (BNDD) seized sport sedans belonging to the suspects in a raid at El Comedor Mex· icano, a cafc at 11765 Edinger Ave., Fountain VaUey. , A truck used by Pink Apple Produce Company and allegedly used to smuggle the killer drug in from Mexico was also impounded as evidence, Arrestees include Albert G. Ellsworth, 44, of 9462 Waterfront Drive, HWltington Beach ; Paul E. Aragon, 36, and his nephew Armando S. Ramirez, 19, both of 8392 Danbury Circle, HWltington Beach; John L. De LaTorre, 24, of 11050 Centa Circle, Garden Grove; Paul Lovato, 21, or 2012 Rose Lane, Orange, and Pedro V. Hernandez, 52, of 4101 Sixth St., Santa Ana. Costa Mesa Narcotics Detail Sgt. John Regan said the six were associated in several firms . They include El Comedor Mexicana, El Valle Restaurant, 13041 Main St., Garden Grove; De LaTorre Landscaping, the produce firm and American Balboa Glass Company, 1617 Placentia Ave., Costa Mesa. The glass firm is owned by Ellsworth, who employed one of the other rive suspects in the police facility window in· stallation. "They were using these businesses as fronts/' Sgt. Regan charged today. He said his men initiated the in. vestigatlon five months ago and included BNDD agents due to the scope of the alleged heroin smuggling and distribution ring in Orange and .Los Angeles counties. "They were dealing in SO percent pure heroin," Sgt. Regan alleged, saying this JS extremely potent. "It got down to where we were buying it by the pound ,'' he added. "The actual amount of money involved 1a· classified information, but the federal government spe nt thousands of dollars," lhe veteran narcoUcs detective declared. Teams including Sgt. Regan, detectives .Norm Kutch and Don Casey, plus BNDD perS91lnel carried out· the raids on short notice when notified of an incoming shl~ ment. ''We didn't exptet it to go so soon," he remarked. lnvestlgators said Hernandez was inned with a revolver but made no at· (See HEROIN, Page I) • UPI Ttl'"'"' CITES DANGERS Nixon Advisor Kl1slngtr Kissinger Says Hop es Remai1i For Russ Talks WASHINGTON (AP) -Dr. Henry A. Kissinger said today President Nixon realizes his latest V~etn m moves "will create short-term diffi !ties for Soviet leaders" but fully pes to proceed with Moscow summit talks May 22. Kissinger, the President's assistant for national security a!Cairs, said the United States received no indi cation Crom Moscow as to whether the Soviets will want to proceed with the summit. He said ''it will probably be a day or so" before formal reaction is received . While saying Nixon's attempt to block receipt or Soviet war supplies to North Vietnamese ports presents A-1oscow with difficulties, Kissinger said lhe Soviets "permitted a situation that posed mas. slve difficulties for us." - The preside ntial aide, who repeat.edly restated an American willingness to resume public or private peace talks. told a news conference the Nixon ad· ministration "perhaps underestimated the mas sive inUux of offensive weapons. Kissinger argued that the Soviet 8fTY!S shipments tl~ped the mllltnry balance 1n (See KISSINGER, Page !) 'Mason Judge' Dies RICHMOND, Ind. (APl -Kenneth MacDonaJd, 70. an actor who for 10 years played a judge in the "Perry t.1ason" television aeries, died Friday. • air Man, Wife Returning Home Shot By TERRY COVILLE Of t1M tMUy PU.t Stitt A Westminster couple were shot to death early this morning on the doorstep or their home, apparently as they retu~ ed fronl a night out. Police said Frank f\farrus Schiavone, /41, and his wifq, Shirley Rine Schiavone. 44, were both shot in the back as they stepped through the doorway of their home at 6202 Choctaw Drive. Their bodies were discovered by their 11·year~ld son, Steven, who was aslee p ln his bedroom, but woke up 'when he heard the sbots, police said. One ne ighbor said he heard the muffled shots about 2:20 a.m .. looked out his win· dow and saw a medium built, lightly clothed man running around the corner of the Schiavone home. Police investigators said they have no theory yet on why the double murder was committed. The murder weapon has not been found. Schiavone, a pressman for the Leng Beach lndependenl Press-Telegra m, was shot in the back while his wife was hit in the head and in the back, by an as ye t unknown caliber of bullet, police said. The couple were apparently shot from outside, police explalned, and their bodies were stretched across the open doorwa y when Steven found them . A neighbor, Peter Garland, described the Schiavones as "good people". He said they have a son, John, in BurbRnk, and (S.e MURD ERS, Page %) Orange Coalt Weather Skies will be falr exeeei ror early morning low clouds. Highs should range from 69-72 with the lows from 53-58... l i\SIDF. TOD,\ V Tltt mining tow11 of ldria 11.;fll shut down at the end of school, its I20·year hi&tory ending iii co11cer1' over ecology a11d pollu· tion. See Story, Page 12. L.M, l tv• • Mtwln " Ct1lltrnl1 • • Mulu•I ll'111C1t " Clln lflnl ,,_,, N1!11n1I Ntwl • com Its " Orant t C1u111, • CroH'#Ol'4 " $11"111 , .... Dtl!ll Nttlttl ,4 ltK~ Ml'11ttt lf.lt ltilklr!tl P••• • l t '•v,tlffl " l:•l•rl1l111Mnl " 'fl'IH1tr1 " ll'lftlfttt l•ll Wttl!ltt' • fltr ~ ltKtftl • w~nt Wt 1ll " .... K ... " Wf-'l Newt 1).14 A.11111 Ll llCltn " Wcrlll Ntft • • I % DAILY PilfJ I ' Tllfldaf, M1y 9, 1972 .2 Pirates Killed Israeli Troops End Hijacking TEL AVIV (AP ) - Israeli army troop!! today killed two Arab hijacke rs, captured two others and released 97 perM>n!I on a Belgian jetliner the terrorists threatened to blow up. The passengers escaped minutea afttr two men climbed onto the wine of the plane and forced I.be emtrgency doors open. "It is all over now ," 1ald an army spokesman, 21 hours after the plane land- ed at Tel Aviv International Airport. Both of the dead guerrillas were men From Pagel HEROIN ... tempt to resist when placed under arrest. wearing wigs as disguises. The captured hijackers v.•ere women, one or whom was shot in the chest and seriously •,•oounded. Capt. Rtginald Levy. the pilot, climbed out of the bullet·scarred jetliner \li'ilh hi! hands covered In blood. But he smiled and apparently was not injured. "Thanks ve:ry much. It's a lovely day," he told Defense Minister Moshe Dayan. who was slanding beside the plane with Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. David Elazar and four generals. Officers said 18 Israeli soldiers dressed In whit~ Sabena overalls burst through the doors of the plane and opened !ire on the guerrillas. "Lie down! Lie down! Everything is all right," the soldiers yelled to passengers as they fired at the hijackers. Protests . Sparked On Campus By The Associated Press Antll'·:ir demonstrations er u pt e d throughout California as students and others protested President N ix on '1 mining of North Vietnamese ports. a1ost demonstrations were peaceful but \'iolence erupted in the city of Berkeley and the Universi ty or Calitornia camp1.13 there. In San Jose. police said two fires, ap- parenl\y caused b}' incendiary devices, caused $200,000 damage early today at an Anny reserve station and $1,000 damage lo a Navy-1\<farine training center. "We used just about every type of sophisti cated detection method during tbla ca!le, including plain old-fa shioned Jegwork," Sgt. Regan said In announcing It. One bull et hit the terrorist leader between the eyes. He identilied himself as Capt. Rafat . The two bodies were laid on the plane's wing. Their blood was splashed all over the passenger section . BERKELEY PROTEST OF PRESIDENT NIXON'S BLOCKADE OF NORTH VIETNAM Police Car Burned During Demonstration by 1,000i Somt Were Arrested At Berkeley, six persons were arrested ~tonday night arter about 500 anti"'ar demonstrators overturned and set fire to an empty police car during a torch1ight parade and ripped do"'" an eighl4 foot· high chain-link rence around the tormer ''Peop.le's Park," focus of a 1969 universi· ty distu rbance. After destroying the fence, about 350 of the group headed back toward the cam· pus over1urning mailboxes. telephone booths and newsstands and sniashing windows along the way. "Our helicopter played an especially big role in surveillance." Value of the 39 ounces seized Monday night would be about $31,200 wholesale and up to S250,000 after it was cut with other compound~ ~h as milk gugar tor street sales. Investigators say the shipment came from 1r1exico, but they are uncertain of its tint origin, possibly through the major international heroin smuggling center in MarseUle, France. The IU"J)edl reportedly had no con- nection to a major amphetamine drug di!trlbuUon ring allegedly broken last week after also operating through legitimate business fronts. InveaUgators .:!aim other drugs - primarily barbiturate pills -were men- tioned in connection with the gerles of ar· rest.a Monday, but only heroin was taken as evidence. From Pagel MURDERS ... another IOTI, Richard, who was wounded two weeks ago in Vietnam. Another neighbor , Joe Maher, added : "There's a numb shock when you hear something like this. 'Jbe w h o I c neighborhood Is worried." Pollet investigators 1pent the day 1earchlng the boUJe and yard for the weapon or weapons and any other signs of what happened. The boy, Steven, attends Finley School in the Westminster 1chool district. He telephoned police alter discovering the bodies of his parents. The Schiavone home is in a housing tract called "Indian Vill age" in northwes t Westminster, near the San Diego Freeway. Farmers Picket Co~nty Of fices The released passengers laughed. smiled and kissed each other, then climbed into buses to be taken to the airport building. Shouts of joy rang through Knesset - the Israeli parliament -when Premier Golda Meir and the government received word that the troops had taken the plane. The hijackers took control of the Sa- bena aircraft Monday after a stop in Vienna on a flight from Brussels to Tel Aviv. When it landed at Tel Aviv they aqJ pull alll?Jd onn dn Mo1q 01 ~uarea.ni1 87 passengers and 10 cre\\'lllen aboard upnless the Israeli government released Arab guerrillas. The hijackers were anned with guns. grenades and explosives. Levy, allowed to )eave the plane once for negotiations, told ne\vsmen he was certain the gunmen would carry out their threat "unless they get what they want." Dayan and Transpcrt Minister Shimon Perez spent a sleepless night at the airport as representative of the Interna- tional Red Cross tried to negotiate. Figures on the number of guerrillas the hijackers wanted released ranged from 100 to JOO. They wanted them put on the plane and flown to Cairo. Today, the Israeli st.ate radio reported the government rejected the demands. The state radio said Israeli negotiators offered the four hijackers safe passage to another country if they released the passengers and crew. Senate Moves To Repeal Law SACRA¥ENTO (UPI) -A bill repeatfifl California's nearly cen~ tury-old law prohibiting the im- porting of Chinese and Japanese women for purposes of prpstitution has cleared the State Senate. State Sen. Alfred Song, author of the bill, said it would not open the door for the importation of pros- titutes from the Far East. "It simply rem-0ves the last vestiges of Oriental exclusion laws from our statutes," he said. Tass Refers to Move As 'Aggressive Acts' MOSCOW (AP) - Tass accused Presi- dent Nixon today. of "naked aggressive acts'' and violating international law in his actions against North Vietnam -and conceivably against Soviet shipping. The Soviet news agency T a s s disl ribuled a six~paragraph dispatch under a \Yashington dateline. about 12 hours after Nixon's announcement or plans to block ihe approaches to North Vietnamese ports. Tass said that in addition to mining port entrances, Nixon gave orders for •American armed forces to strike blows on internal waters, rails and roads" in North Vietnam. It sai d "Nixon has tried to justify these naked aggressive acts. \\1hich mean an aggravation or American interference in Vietnam and the violation ol norms of international Jaw. as saving the li ves or 60,000 American soldiers." Tass said Nixon also blamed "a Com- munist threat to South Vietnam" for the actions, adding such a threat "is used by American propaganda to justify the acts of escalation of wa r against the Vietnam people." Tass said Nixon promised the United States wants to end the war and take its troops home, "but the practical steps as well as the measure announced spea k to the contrary." The dispatch noted the President 's assurances that his decisions were not aimed at any third country. While the President pointedly directed his remarks to the Soviet Union. Tass made no men4 lion of specific references to the Soviet Union in the speech. The Tass report contained no indication of \\hat the Soviet response \vould be to the direct challenge posed to the Kremlin by Nixon's decisions. There was no immediate response from Communist China or North Korea . Their broadcasts did not mention Nixon's move. specifically mentioned the "imperialists ol the United States" among the foes of communism. This year, it made no men- tion of the United States, but Greehko said the Soviet Union is "giving assistance and support to the heroic Viet- namese people.'' Frona Page 1 . KISSINGER ... Indochina in favor of Hanoi's forces. Responding to questions, Kissinger said '1.he Nixon moves involve ".some risk." He added: "The judgment was that it did not in- volve an unacceptable risk." But he conceded that only events will prove whether the presidential strategy will work. Kissinger sa id he would not expect the moves against Hanoi's shipping Janes to affect the battle in South Vietnam during the next three weeks. However, he said there should be a battlefield impact beyond that Jl(lint. Kissinger said Nixon reached his decisions "with enormous pain and great reluctance.'' He pictured his own then·secret May 2 meeting in Paris with Hanoi's Le Due Tho as having played an important part in setting the stage for the moves Nixon anoounced h1onday night. Six months had been spent arranging the Paris conference, he reported. But he said that his assurances to Le Due Tho that the United States is willing to explore "every conceivable approach" toward peace were met by a restatement of a standard Hanoi line. He said: "What we heard could have been clipped from a newspaper and sent to us through the mail." Froan Page l MINES ... tered on a narrow channel called the Canal hilaritime \vhich was dredged into !he harbor. It is about a mile long, about 500 yards wide and dredged to a depth of about 20 feet. Other ports on the target list included Hon Gai, Cam Pha, Quang Khe and Dong 11oi. The U.S. Command declined lo disclose the type of mines used. but those available include acoustic mine 11 detonated by the noise of a ship's pro- pellers as it passes nearby, magnetic mines set off a ship's steel hull disrupting the mine's magnetic field and contact mines which detonate when hit by a ship. The mining operation began at 9 a.m . Saigon time, just as President Nixon was beginn ing his televised address. The President said nations shipping supplies to North Vetnam had been notified they have three "daylight periods" to get th eir ships out of North .Vietnamese pOrts. The notification said the mines were set to activate automatically at 3 a.m .. PDT Thursday. President Nguyen Van Thieu welcomed the U.S. mining of North Vietnamese ports and predicted that South Viet· namese forces will recapture some ter- ritory lost to enemy £orces in the current offensive. In a speech on national radio and television tonight, Thieu called President Nixon's announcement "a strong decision to show the detennination of the United States to help the South Vietnamese peo- ple fight communism." He said Hanoi's decision thus far has created 650,000 civilian refugees and 25,000 civilian casualties. Thieu said South Vietnamese forces had bee n !orced to abandon territory in Quang Tri, Kontum. and Binh Dinh prov- inces because of heavy enemy pressure. But he added: "\Ve will retake some territory in the coming days. ;'\Ve will recapture Quang Tri , the city that \\'e lost because or the mistakes of some leaders or under hard pressure from the enemy.'' P1·ecaulion Failed At least 10 law enforcement officers suffered n1inor injuries. police said. Officers used shotguns to fire ricochet rou.nds of "silly putty" into the paven1ent1 which then bounced into protesters, sting· illg but not penetrating the flesh. Tear gas was used once to disperse a group police said. ' In Santa Barbara, an estimated 1,500 pe rsons marched from the student com- munity or Isla Vista, adjacent lo UC San· ta Barbara. to U.S. 101. where they blocked traffic for more than three hours ear~y. today as a symbol of their op-- position to the President's announcement of the mining. There were no arrests, police said. Sheriff's deputies rerouted traffic. After t\\·o ho urs. some or t.b e demonstrators i:narchcd to the university campus , smashing at least 50 windows in an i~dustrial park in nearby Goleta, a sheriff's sergeant said. The demonstrators bloc.king t h e hi~hway left about 3 a.m. At Stanford University, some 200 student! marched to the campus home of PresideJ"JI "Richard Lyman where they were met by flve riot-gelred · sheriff's deputies. · A spokesman ~at'allo\\·ed to bring the ~roup's charges of unive rsity complicity in the war to Lyman . He reportedly had no comment. . The street fighting In Berkeley con· hnued for two hours, with Police cars - many with broken windows -charging knots of demonstrators. Polict information offietr Richard Berger sai~ that at around 1 a.m. police began making arrests when it was clear some groupt would not be broken up. Mon.th's Draft 9,000: 1-35 WASHINGTON (AP) -The Selective Service System an. nounced today it will order about 9,000 young men \Vith lottery numbers I through 35 to repor t to the Army in June. More than 50 pickets marched in fro nt of the Orange county Farm Bureau ot- fices today in a nationwide protest by Cesar Chavez's United Farm Workers Union. ffe said importation oJ prostitutes is outlawed by slavery laws that would not be affected by his legislatiori. The Soviet leaders apparently must halt shipments of war material to Hanoi or risk having their ships sunk by the mines U.S. planes are planting at the en-Hayakawa to Stay On SAN DIEGO (APJ -The explosion trances to North Vietnam's ports. They Sunday of Apollo 16 command ship gas The move is aimed at completing a call last t.-1arch for 15,000 men over the April-h-1ay-June period. the draft headquarters said. Only those Jllen with numbers 1 through 15 'Dave been taken. A spokesman for the local pickets who are marching at 1916 W. Chapman Ave .. Orange, said the ir protest against the farm bureaus was because "its leaders are illegally using their organization to cru sh the aspirations of America's migrant farm workers." He added, "The farm bureau Is a strike-breaker because it organizes com- pany unions, it is racist in its policies and breaks the Jaw by using tax exempt money to attack the "'orkers' union ." The picket said the one day protest was being carried out at more than 100 farm bureau ofrices in 34 states. I IT ' DAILY PILOT Th• Or•"9• Cwtt OAILY PILOT, •1111 wtlkll h umbll'ltll the He-#l·Pr-., .. 1111Dlllllc1I r, the Orl"9f (Mil ~llhlntl (OfftNrry. s..,.. ,,,, tdlUO•'I• •r• .ll\lbllllled, MW•v lli•Mh Frld1y. /llf CO.ti Mn1, HtwPtrl l t1<h, liu"'"'''°"' l 11cll/FDl.O'l11l" Vlllty, r_.,...,, l tltll, l•vl11t1S.dd!tbedl •1111 S111 Cltmen!t/ Stn Jw1" C1plttru10. A 1ln1I• rtolon11 e<1i!i0<1 Is f'o.-ttl1111t.i s.r11rd1vs _,,, Sllfld1v1. Tnc prl1KINI Pwbll1hlt'll pl1nl 11 11 3JO Wttl Ill y Slrttl, (t1l1 Mtt10 C~tltom11, t:t, •. , flobt rf N. W11d Prr,klt"I •ncl f'ublltl'ltr J1clr fl. Curlt v V·~· f'rttldttU I nd CO.Mfl l Mtntttr Tho,,,.11 K1t¥il Editor lho11111 A. M11rithi11• Mtn11t111 ltllor Ch1rl11 H. Loot Riclr.1~ P. Nill Aufiltnl Mlt!ll'Cllllll £dllert Ofllo<I c::0.tt M ... : D WHI I•' Strttt Nflll'Oor! ll11ch: lJU Nil"#'Dffi tou1n1rtl LltVN 11.,dl: m ,., .. ,A- Hlfllliflolo!I httll: 17'1J attcti louln_,.. a.11 Ckomeni.: »S Mwt11 I I C.'"lnl ._. Tt11,'111 (714) &42-4121 C'-HW AIMll:dwt ,41-1671 ,IMI c..tN' ANM hir'lrl ff U.,.-ltitdl 4t2o441t '""' .... °"""'" c..wty '""""'""' 141-UJt Cenrlltit, 1m. Oranot c ... 1 '11bnt11tio.t '-, • ,.. -....... llllnl••ll•11•· M •111 --tr ~1--tt MAlll .. _,. .. tt11'11fU(.. wl7fWI ~Ill ..... .. ~-· --· ........ CllM _.._, "" 11 CIOI MtM. Clli,..._ .._,.ltlt1'11 IW Urrilr U 61 /llllllftllyf IW !NII U.11 l'l'llfllfl/J1 inltlt.t, ...,,., ... llM "*"""'· Nixon Shifted GOP? • also must decide whether they can still SAN FRANCISCO (UPl} _ Dr_ s. J. tumes occurred during a new safety pr<r be host to Nixon tor the su mmit meeting Hayakawa, president of San Francisco cedure taken by the National Space both governments want, a visit two State College, denied Monday that he Agency, a NASA spokesman said Mon- "·eeks away. plans to resign this year. He tenned day. The explosion during defueling in a The president made his announcement •·nonsense" published reports that he was hangar at Nortlt Island Naval Air Station on a Soviet national holiday at 4 a.m. quitting at the end ol the fall semester sent shrapnel-like metal through the air. Moscow time and no word on it appeared and had selected Don Garrity, academic Forty-six persons were taken to the Most of the new inductees will be registrants in classes 1-A and l-A-0 who were born in 1952, but "a small number of older men also will be issued orders," the announcement said. SAN DIEGO (AP ) -The shift of the Republican National Convention from San Diego to Miami Beach was engineered by White House officials. says the San Diego Evening Tribune. Convention planners and other residents believe the con- troversy over International Telephone & Telegraph's pledge of financial support was the reason for the move. the newspaper said in an article Monday. in the papers. affairs vice president, as his successor. Naval Hospital. The papers instead were full of Victory _:~;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;~~;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ii Day proclamations, including an order of I the day by Marshal Andrei A. Grechko, the defense minister, on the "constant combat readiness" of Soviet and \Varsaw Pact forces. Last year Grechko's order of tlte day * * * Enemy Vows to Fight On, Hits Nixon 'illtimatum' PARIS (AP) -'fhe Viet Cong accused President Nixon today or laying down an ultimatum to the Vietnamese people, but said that they will "never give up as long as they have not ~alized their sacred ob-- jcct l\·es. '' In its -first commtnl on Nixon's decision ·to blockade North Vietnam 's ports, the Viet Cong delegation to the Paris peace talks called on Nixon to "Jm- mediately halt all or his acts of war _ .• and e.ngage in serious negotiations. " ... ,.1r. Nixon gives an ultimatum to the \tietnamest people to oblige them to capitulate," the statement continued. "He tries to humil iate a people which I~ struggling for Its Independence and freedom , and wh.iCh never hu done harm to the American people. "Clearly, the Nlion 1dmlnlstr1Uon acts like a barbarous aggressor and like an in- ternational Jtndarme, defying all the standards of international law, and all in- ternational COnventior11, as \\•eU as all ·moral principles." The sbttment added that 11the Niion admlnlstraUon Is badly mistaken In believing that thn!ata, Violence and deetltlul nwieu .. en wlD aubjupt< the V'etnamese people. 11 • It said the United States must respond to the Communist peace plan calling for condit!onnl withdrawal of American troops, lilt resignation of President Nguyen Van Thieu and formation of a coalition government. "This is the only correct way to settle the South Vietname se problem, con- torming to the interests of the Viet- namese and American people ... " the statement said. "The road toward ag- gravation or the aggression, escnlatlon of the war and accumulation ()( crimes can only lead the United States toward more serious fa ilures." L 'Humanite. the French C'.ommunist party newspaper, said the mining of North Vietnam's harbors was "a new act of war whose cons~uences are un- predictable. Not only does ft proV1>ke an aggravation of the conflict but It threatens it.s extension, "f'{ilton criticized the Soviet Unlon for aiding the Democratic Republic or Viet· nam. This a cynical ittlttide coming from a man who has M!nl to lndochJna an ex· pedltlonuy corps supported by an enormous air and naval fleet," the party paper sald. • SERVICE ... How Much Is It Worth? In the carpel business sometimes its worth EVERYTHING! Hardly 1 day goes by that we don't gel a call regarding another comp1ny1s poor installation. Occasionally the damage resulting from poorly sewn seam• or taped seams is not repairable. Then the value of the investment looks pale indeed! Why pey $300.00 or $1500.00 for carpeting and gamble with the installation? We maintein aR of our own crews, all taught ihe ONLY wey to in- stall carpeting-the RIGHT way! The greatest majority of our busineu is referral: There is 1 r11son! ' ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placentia AYe. COSTA MESA 646-4838 • • < I • r ' .. ' • i • M M m ta m , . r St Go. pa ing Ho go T A SAN urging tional Superi previo stitutio The Sun·Te A. Tu doors Turner lengthy Ga Me By A.LB Wish to their b have to 1ccordi A.a,.m •The :uii<n permit! hibitiOn lt~ ~ erook ty ~ul~0 U.S. Co 'Di c li~nal ASsemb voted r "lf I m"an in nifnt w h! said. ;Aft<r !li<n v ft)Jking jl'he "'1Jt • l1w. 't <: ;~ Y"' , ---- I 1. •-~,-.. ,.,~ -·::::.:._:.....,.;.~~...,,,,,,,::::::m:;:·::::::r;l'::;;;,.;.:; .. ;;;;.r.amt.tm'iliiii~~;,;;;:;;:;;tsu -"'""lt 1¥72'11'"""' ..... ...,. UAIL y PILOT P'llol'ot bf John Vl llfrll Mtascle, Muscle, Muscle Off To Tlie Races Mike Sandoval, (lefl ), and Pat Welter test their muscle fiber in what appears to be a battle of Ti- tans. It \Va:i; act ually a battle of Tritons at San Cle· mente High School during Greek \Veek activities. Both contestants had a good many rooters and kibitzers. But in an y contest someone loses. Sand· oval Jost t.o the mighty arm of Welter. Greek \Veek activities at San Clen1cnle High School included the great chariot rares. Here are some of the fa st starters. The \veek honored Triton. son of Poseidon. the god of the sea and the \Valery ete· tnenl. Triton is the school's namesake There \\la s also a god and goddess profile contest and a Greek sl ave-trade auction. Sto1np, Stomp, Sto11ip Go, Lindsey. Go. Lind sey Powell is stomping up a storm y,·hile her partner Larry Ponci no assists. It was sup posed to be a grape stomp· ing contest but grapes were too expensive so they used oranges. Ho,vever. when all was said and stomped there was no juice, just a gooey pu lp. Trial Testimony Released . After Journalists' Plea SAN BERNA RDINO IAP \ -Under urging from Sigma Delta Chi, the na- tional professiona l journalistic society, a Superior Court judge has releai;ed previously secret testimony from a pro- stitution case. The society anrl the San Bernardino Sun-Teleg ram protested when .Judge Don A. Turner took testi'Tiony behind closed doors in the case April 24. But later, Turner reltased the 20-page text of the lengthy trial. Gals Wrestling Men Rejected By NY Assembly ALBAN Y. N.Y. fUPf) -If women (Vjsh to get a hammerlock on men . or pull their bair or bite or kick them, they will have to do it outside the wrestling ring, according to the New York State Alsembly. -The legislative body rejected an aJnendment Monday which would have ptrmith~d coed profesi;ional wrestling ex- hibitions. Its iliponsor. Dom inick Di Carin. of Brooklyn, claimed the coed matche s W'Ould probably be &!lowed 11nyway under ttie women's rights amendment lo the U.S. Constitution. Di Carlo, who voled against lhe na- tional .amendmenl when it passed the ASsembly last week, insisttd those who voted for it should support his mollon. "If A won11tn can hold her own with a man in the ring. 1 believe that amend· nt would be Interpreted to allow It," ht said. .!After 30 minutes of debate., Di Carlo n voted aga inst his own prcposal, king it unanimous. e State Senate llnd the governor st approve the bill btfcre it becomes IW. SOC asked that the testimony be released. contending the public ha s a right to know its ccntents. The case centers around Will iam A. Northup. 43, and three others cha rged v.·ith running a house of prostitution. Ncrthup claimed in his defense that the house. two blocks from the sheriff's nf· fice, had been set up by the sheriff's department tn gain vital information from city officials. At cne point in the .trial. Turner c\osfd the courtroom to the public and press. Then attorney Lewis Garrett was called to the stand. Garrett's lestimonv. and that of sher· iff's deputy Thomas koles1,;1r, were taken in secret. de spite protests from the district attcrney. As it turned out. neither man's stale· ment was crucial to the case. "We had no idea what was being said in !hat secret testimony and some of It mij!'ht ha ve been important for the people of San Bernardine." said Carl Yetzer, president of the SOC l11land chapter. After further testimony, Northup ind his codefendanl.! changed their pleas to guilty. Coimty Attorney Tapped for ICC? Santa Ana attcmey Rodolfo Montejano has declined comment on reports that he is being considered for a seat on the Interstate Commerce Commission. but confirmed that he is flying to Washlngtcn today. Wire reports said Uie S3-year..old Orange County Democrat was tc confer with White House aldes about ap- poinUnent tc the ll·man commission. Tht 1eat Is expected to be vacated in July. Montejano currenUy i~ president cf the Rancho Santiai;o CommunJty College' Dislrict that includes Sanla Aga Junlcr College. He Jlvn in Santa Ana,- LAFC to W eigl1 Annexations To Laguna Bea~h Proposed annexations to Laguna Beach and to the sanitary districts ser,·ing Costa Mesa and Huntington Harbour will be before the Local Agency f~rmation Commission Wednesday. The Laguna merger involves 7.7 acres on the east side of Laguna Canyon Road north of the Big Bend. The proposed an· nexation was .filed by the city of Laguna Bea ch on behalf of the property owners. The sanitary district proposals include 22.8 acres south of Adams Avenue and we st of Mesa Verde Drive in Costa l\1esa. and 18.2 acres east of Harbor Boulevard and north of Baker Street. Both y,·ere filed by the Costa Mesa Sanitarr District on beha lf of the prop· erty oy,•ners y,·ho requested se,ver service to their acreage. The Hunt ington Harbour annexation in- cludes about 1.5 acres north of 'Varner Avenue and east of Pacific Coast JUghway which the County Sanitalion District No. 11 y,•ishes to include with ap- proval of the property o\vner. Nixo11 Ro~v Guild RecallsPairiting in Nude FORT LAUDERDALE. Fla. tUPI\ -A $39 painting <lf President Nixon in lhe nude has been withdrawn from an a'rt show here by the board of directQrs of the Broward Art Guild . The picture ls entitled. ··Th e Emperor 's New Clothes," and depicts the Presidenl with both arms upraised in a peace sign. The title refers to the children's tale M ou1itain Lio1t Goes Suburba1i GRANADA ll!LLS ~AP\ -Just as any i;ensib lc man y,•ould do, Nicholas Metrick dashed back into his home and locked the door when he found a mounta in lion in his backya rd. ~1etrick called the animal shelter ~ton­ day and officers quickly lranquilized the 200-pound c;it and took it to the shelter. Animal Control Officer Herman Kula said the puma n1ay have been released by someone who couldn·1 control it. Plans were mal!e to release the cat in its n11tural habitat. about an emperor \\'ho appeared naked before his subjects. who all were afra id le deny he was dressed in a new suit of clothes. The board reluct;i,nlly withdrew the painting b,v John Boase, a faculty member al Broward·Community College. declaring he "ha s the right tc make a statement." PressUr"e't~ take the picture nff the wall included the resignation of show chairman Helen Magee. "'Vhen the directors said I hart m!hing to say about it. I qu it." sh e s;i,id. "\Ve're not a protest group. \\'e're a nonprofit group trying to raise the sland ard nf lccal art." The directors replaced the picture \\'1th a sign sayin,lt the sign rep\acts !he artist's ''personal !'ilatement" y,•hich an "unenlightened minority" 1Y<1.nled tn J!RJ:l. •·isn 't it ;i,mazing that the minorit y has good taste." Mrs . Magee said. Boase has two ether pa intings in the show. One shows former Pre!'iident Lyndon Johnson with two blood-red fingers in a peace sig n and the other sho1Y1 Vice President Spiro Agnew with the jawbone of an ass in one hanrt and a much smaller Statue of Liberty in the other. CONTINENTALS ... with the • • • ''Golden Touch'' Rape Convi ction Easier After Ne'v La'v in NY ALBANY. NY . (lJPl l -The Senate has passed !egisl;i,lion that removes the nred of a rape vi ctim to prove through corroboratin~ testimnn v thr accu !'ied r;i,pi sl':;: identity or that Penetration 11c tu· atlv occurred. 1'he measure. passer! Mondiiy y,·ithout debate nn a vol.e of 56 to I, was supported by y,•nmen's libcralinnists whc com- plained that the existinR laws of rvidence make ii harder lo convict a rapist than a muRRer or an assaulter. That argument w<1.s supported by the vo!umr of rapes reported 12,141 1n 1971 ) an<i the relatively lo,.,. numbrr of con· vicrions resulting rabnut :'\fi!l l. Legal experts as well ha ve arguPd that conv ictions are hampercrl by lhe re· quiremen t.t. that force. penf'lr11.tlon and identity nf the rapisl be proved througb cnr robor:iting testimony. The bill , y,•hich Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller is expected to sign into law, provides tha t the accused cannot be con· victed merel y on the testimony of the alleged victim. Bruises would suffice Jo prove lick <lf consent, but corroboration would still be needed lo prove an attempted rape. MARl(IV# l 4-Dr. SEDAN 2-Dr. COUPE We have an outstanding se lection of these fine cars! Home Of The New Car . , "Golden Touch" ((ii)(,,.\ - llome Of The New Car ..• "Golden Touch" • • Jos t • Nixon Risk.s 'Cherish.ed Goals 9 Italy Vooo ! . . ""' . Mi ning _of Harbor Pos es Direct Challenge to Russia Fasc i-St,s ~.:ri,., with Tom urphinr 'Oth er Sid e' Fi gu red Wron g RANDO,\! TH OUGHTS DEPT. -You look at the fmage of the face of the telev lsion screen and abruptly ,you recognize tha t 1h1s 1s no longer !he young congressm an from \\'hillier: smiling, !ell-assured. catapul!ed into nat!onal pro- minence by some secre! papers found in 1 pumpkin patch. This is a tired man. a "'·nrried man . a grim President of the Uniled States. He u•as !he glib. smiling, professionally polished politician v.·ho gained hls place in 1he sun holding General E1senho1\er's victory hand in lhP. air. No1v the heavy bro1vs are drawn down and creases and lines extend from that famous n(')se drawn by so many car. toonists. And the mnuth !ha{ flashed the easy smlle is !hin and set in a crooked Ii!· Ile line And ii is clea r -as his advisers have insis!ed in briefing the press ove r the pas! fe1" yPars -rha! in th is war, there are now ver~ few options left open to him. And as his image fli ckers across your scrern, he is lelling you that now hn is exerrising some of thosf!""remaining op. lions. He is selling up a naval blockade. HP 1s mining 'Hai phon~ and the other North Vietnamese harbors. He will bomb the rails thal bring the v.·;ir machi nes 10 the enemy. \Ve must , he tells you, keep the guns oul of the hands of the.oulla"•s. • HE LOOKS old and tired. Bu! he look5 determined. Fa intly , he reminds you of thal young man 1vho sat in the sa1ne seat before a si milar televisi on audience -it seems so many years ago -who threw down the challenge to Soviet miAsile ships and declared we woull'l keep those utli mate wea pons out of Cuba "even if it turns to 1shes in our mouths." Another president , anolher time . CLEARLY OVER the past months. the President gave lhe Other Side all the in- dicat.ors that he was anxious to wind dO\\'n fh1s miserable war. He v.•as making a ll the right pronouncements to do so. HI'! was pulling out troops as rapidly as the was pulling Ut troops as rapidly as the traffic \1·ould bear. He \1·as packing his diplomat ic bags for Moscow. The overtures for peace f!o"'ed thick and fas.r Clearly. it seemed open season for bargains. ba rtering and real concilialion for peace. But someho"'· you gel th!'! Impression that rhe Other Side read the signposts all wrong . THEY READ it as an elec11on year in which the Prl'!sidenl of the United States was hearing the anli·"'ar cries all across his 0\1•11 l<ind . A diff1c11U time for him 111 which he n1ust back a111ay from the miserable 111i:tr and buy peace in his time ar any price. So they pressed on southv.•ard. And they pushed herder than ever to pour increasin~ numbers of war machines inlo the battle. And now they know tha t once again . as in Cuba. Korea and Berlin , they read the sig npost s all wrong. You are ll'!fl wondering Lf the man v.•ill · ever ha ve a chance to let the worry tines in his face go away. If he will be allowed 10 relax at his Casa Pacifica and breath!'! the good air on !his best of all possible CORSt~ ~1 AVB E HE v.•1 Jl lose the gratitudl'! of his Republic. ~1aybe he will lose the e!ec· lion. Or maybe , just maybe, he will force the other side back lo th e bargaining table seeking meani n~ful peace. By ST~WA RT H ~NSLEY U,.1 D4'*"1t1t •-11r \\"ASH JNGTON -f'res1dedt ~LXOn, faced with a rapidly worsen ing militarv ~Jtuallon In Vielnsm. has taken a high risk step v.·hlch pl11.ces In jPopardy his cheris hed "era of negot!a!lon~" with Russia . The President nbviously helie 11rs the gamble 1s V.'llrth taklng -Qr Al the very least una voidable -or he v.•ould not have decidl'!d to order naval and a!r measur:s to cut off or \•astl11 diminish thP flow of So11il'!t supplies to Ha noi. The presidential strategy poSf'I a direct challenge to the Soviet Union . 11 hich can hardly accept the validity of his mea sures but can der.1de to liidestep the issue to avoid irrcparah!e damage to Soviet-American nego1 1a1ions on other issues. , Russia cou ld condemn :-.:1xon 's blockade as illegal and provocative, but ii could a1'oid sending vessels inlo Ha iphong and other ports for !he time belng white it decided whether to discuss the situation . - v.·Jlh Ni xon al the Mo!((lw summit eon· ference, scheduled M1y 22. The President appeared to be pro- ceeding on the a5sumptlon that the Soviet Union did not consider Southeast Asia Im· portanl enough lo permit it to jeopardize NEWS ANALYSIS continued negotiations on the big nuclear and European issues with w h i ch \Vashington and ~1oscow are dealina: ll should bl'!come appa rl'!nt sooe v.·hether the President is right in th is assumption.-i:rne l s wrong, the: ~con· sequences could be fearful. The blockade would have no effect on Hanoi's mi litary capability for 1 C<lUple of months , becausl'! of the lime it takes for war material to flow from Haiphong and Hanoi down the tortuous route to the three major fronts in the south. ' The Pre sident, in an obvious effort to ----· •• Ul'I TtlN IMi. UP I FILE PHOTO SHOWS SHIP UNLOADING IN HAIPHONG J apan•H Newsmen Took Picture of Polish Vessel in 1967 Action Stopped Short Of Imposing Blockade By fR ED S. HOffMAN AP MUl!lry Wrlttr \VASHlNG1'0N -President Nixon told the Russians in effect they can sail freighters into North Vietnamese harbors at their own risk. But he has slopped short of declaring a blockade , usually Wicks regarded as an act of war. Pentagon spokesman Daniel z. Henkin said the measures Nixon ordered in 11n effort to seal ofr North Vietnam from outside milita ry aid "is not a block11de in terms of boarding and searching ships." Instead. the U.S. 1\avy will lry to pluJil lhe entranres of Haiphong an.d at least five other North Vietnamese ports wit h magnetic and acoustic mines dropped from carrier-based planes. _Sourcl'!s sa id t.he mines are equipped with delayed·act1on fuses to give Com· munist and other skippers three days to get out of port. a period of gra ce in· dicated in Nixon 's speech ~londay nigh!. inject a po1il ive note, followed up the "bi1 stick" tactics of his blockade order by dangling in front of the Communists a carrot or no mean proportion,;. He offered to Withdraw all American forces from Vietnam within four months after return of U.S. war prisonl'!rg and establishment of 1 n . internationally supervised cease-fir e. The fate of the Saigon government was left to be determi ned by politic1.I negotiati on! between the Nort h Vie tn amese and authori ties in the South. This was the most liberal offer Nixon has madt. It relurned, in effect. to the "two track" theory put forward by Presidential adviser Henry A. KisAinger e1.rly in the Nixon administration. Al that time, th e idea WI! to have pur ely military negoti at ions between Hanoi and Washington. leavi ng the Vietnamese to negotiate the polillcal 11ettlement on their own. Nixon's injection of American ''honor" into the mix as a factor which led to his decision was bound to spark critic i1m • from aome congressmen ind othtr Ame ric1n1 repeatedly have rejected the Idea that It would be hlHTiil ialing for the United State8 to simply pack up and pull out . However, recent polls have ahown !hat the America n public -weary as it is of the frustrating confl ict in Indochina - supported the President's resumption of bombing of the North after Hanoi't In· vaslon aC'ross the the 1 u p p o s e d I Y sacrosanct Demllitar1zed Zont. The Presidenl presumably belie11es the publ ic likewise will support )\is blockade, despite the obvklus peril ii poses of a fe•rful con· frontation wilh the So11iet Union. Nixon, in an obvious effort to prtvent the Kremlin from calling cff the summit conferencl'!, urged Russia not to ·Jet the "arrogance" and '1intr1nsigence" or the North Vietnamese leaders 1abotagt the progreu alre1dy made in Soviet· American necoti ations. He mentioned the 1ains madt toward agreement (In nucleat arms limltatlona and the prospect of ex· panded trade. Meotay Backs Action McGovern Calls Decision 'Flirtation With WWlll' WASHINGTON (UPI) -Sen. George P.lcGovern called President Niron's decision to mine and blockade 1eaporl1 of Nort h Vietnam "flirtation with World War JJI," and Sen. Vanc e Hartke sa id the Presid ent had placed the world ''72 hours from Armageddon." But some oth er members or Con gress Reds Experts Against Mines called for the na tion to rally behind Ni x· PEARL HARBOR /U PI ) -Navy on. ;ind they were joined by AFlrCIO sources at Pearl Harbor says the President George Meany, a critic of Nix· Pacific Fleet expects the North on's dom estic policies. Vietnamese to immediately begin ''ln this time of crisis with li0,000 lives minesweeping operations off the at slake I th ink the American people Port of Haiphong. 3hould back up the President in"espective The fl eet headquarter• hag the of politics or any olher considera tion,'' ope rati-Onal job of mining the main Ml'!any 3aid. ha rbor& in North Vietnam, but its Hartke. who has sought the Democratic h presidential nomination. used some of the experts are fully aware that I e 1l rongl'!st language. The Indiana senator Comm unists are expert s at mine called Nixon's move "the most reckless layi ng and s11·eeping. Mines long act of inlernationll l lawlessness that any have been a favorite weapon of American President has e\'l'!r com· :he Community nations. milled.'' One sourCe said there was P.1C'Govern. c11mpaigning in Nebraska nothing to prevent the North Viel· for the gt al e's primary today, said the na.mese from sweeping the Resurging ROME IUPI) -N~ra scisls ha \le gcored thl'!ir greatest election triumph since World War II today and the West's largest Communist party suffered itJ first setback. \Vith 98 percent of the senate vot e counted in the nation's sixth poglwar na· tional election, Neo-F'ascists held 9.1 per• a.en! of the vote -up 2.4 percent from the 1963 eltcl io n -and were assured at least 19 seats in the 322-seat senate. They held nine after the last election. The Communists polled 28.4 percent In the senate fight , do\1'n l.& percent, and suffered their fir st re versa l in any BRIEFS postwar eleoction. The party remained the second la rges! in Italy. but the setback! carried important p~ychologica l and political importance. The Chrisli11n Democrats, the major postwar power in·• Jl;ilian politics. re· tained Its position as the biggest single party an d polled 38. I percent of the vote with a campaign centered on rejection of e%tremism and maintenance of law .and ord er. By Associated Presa Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey, seeking some ·momentum for his presid~tial campaign. meets Sen. George McGovern in Nebra ska an d Gov. George C. Wall ace in West Virginia today in a pair of non· binding Democratic p r e f e r e n c e primaries. After hii; na rrow victories last week 011er McG011ern in Ohio and Wallace in Indiana, Humphrey ha,; concentrated heavily on Nebraska in the paio;t we ek In hopl!!s of upsrt.ti ng the previously favored McGovem in what may be their clearest head-to-head test before the June 8 California primary. The contest is now rated a tossup. Jn West Virginia, Wall ace cancelled his only scheduled appearance of the week in the face of polls making Humphrey a heavy fa vorite in the state where, .in 1980, Hul'"!'phrty lost • crucial presidential primary to John F. Kennedy. 801h Humphrey and t\-1cC.overn i n· nounced Monday night in Nebraska that they were breaking off their campaigning to return to Washington in light of Presi· dent Nixon's announcement of new moves in Indochina. Nixon step was an escal&tion that was Ha iphong channe ls within minutes "reckless. unnecessary and unworkable." ilfte r th e airborne mine! were 1f -/::( 1::r He 1aid Nixon had take11 the most dropped , un less American ai r and AVON PAR K. Fla. (AP) _Two U.S. dangl'!rous course that has been followed tea power mo11e1 in to protect the Air Force crewmen ha ve been killed in the history of the war. newly·la id fields. when two · F4 Pha ntom jet fighter• Sen. Hubert H. Hum phrey, McG<ivern's bombers collided Mnnday during a chief ri1111l for the Democrat ic nomina· training mission and crashed on the Avon tion, sai d he wou ld ,;top campaigning and to carry the ir offensive to July <lr August. Park gunnery range. Two other crewml'!n fl.v back to Wa shington today to consult Sen. Robert P. Gr iff in. the Republican escaped serious inj~ry. with the congressional leadership about A k -H tht new wa' development. He sai·d the whip in the Senate described Nixon's '"<"\ spo esman at omeslell d Air r orce , ' . . base. "where the plalll'!S were stationed Nill'.on step was a "serious escalation" decision as ''strong m~1ci ne. but idP.ntified the dea d men as r-.1aj. Clayto~ that was "filled with unpredictable nl'!ces.o;ary.·• House Republican Leader Ed1\·ard Hotchkiss, 40, Castille, N.Y .. and da;:;r-~dmund S. 1'.i us kie, an ina~ive Gerald For d predicted' the blockade Capt. William Scott Yeager, 23, Con· presidl'!nlial candidate . said Nixon was would •·stop the fig hting" by keeping nei;~'ille. ~a. "risking • mai·or confrontation with th e apons out of the hands of the North 1:1sted 1.n g~ condit ion 111 ~lacDiU we Af B hospital m Ta mpa were Cap!. Nick Soviet Unio n and with China, and li e is \'ietnamese. Neslon Nassick Jr .. 30. Kensi ngton, Pa. jeopardizing m11jor securitv interests of The League of families of POW s and and Capt. Thomas Alonzo Webb Jr., 29, the Unitl'!d Stales." At"Bbam a Gov. R.d ] d MlAs in Soulheasl Asia said it was happy 1 ge an . S.C. George C. Wallace said he wanted ''any ..A.. ..A.. ..A.. echon an.v president ta kes ... lo bring Ni'xo n had slat ed the prisoners of war J,-f ;,,r 1.r peaC'e and end the war ." were of priority importance. In a state· \VASH INGTON (AP) Sen . John V. Rep. Paul N. McCloskey J r. <R·Calif.), ment it described Nixon'5 decision as a Tunney (0-Calif.1, says subslanlial who opposed Nixon as an antiwar con· "very significant develo pment." evidence indicates U.S. Al.l.orney Harry didate in !he early Republic an presiden· Two \'l'!leran Republican iie nators e.x· Steward _of San Di~,R'o was cleared of any tial primaries. s;iid Nixon's action waio; pressed misgivings about the decision. wrongdoing by Ri chard G. Kleind iens t ''complet.ely outsidl'! his constitutional Sen. J acob Javits !R·N.Y. l. said the ~cau.~e Sle"•ard ''h;id pre vented a JXllen· JXlY.'ers." Rep. John Ashbrook IR·Oh io \. United SI.a tes should have gotten out of tially t'mbarrassing pol i!ic11! scandal'' for Nixon 's conservative challl'!nger. said he Vietnam "long before this" and Se n. the Republicans. supported I.he Prl'!sident but fell "it. prob-George Aiken IR·Vt.1. 11aid he did oo! Kleind ienst \Vas deputy at t 0 r n ey ably w11s too li!tle too late." He said the bel il'!ve the mining <lf !he harbors would general at the time Slewadr "'as cleared Indeed. !he price of hein&. President 1s high. ~t last report. there were 36 ships in Haiphong Harbor. about triple the number there before the North Viel· namese offensive ai;:11inst Soulh Vietnam opened five \\leeks .ilgo. Sixteen shi ps are Russian, I I others fly the flags -0f other Communist countries includ ing ~1ainland China. Cuba, Poland and Ea.~! Germanv . The rema ining nine are Hong Kong b"s~ ships believed under Communist Chinese charter. North Vietnamese tiave enough supplie& ha ve "much effect on batt les." and hi:o1 nominali-0n to succeed .John N. -~---------------------------Mitchell as chief of !he Justice Depart· ment is now pending before the Senate. ~I uzz le Loader 1"leet •rRIENOS~llP. Ind . iAP l -Ramrod~ and pov.•der horns will be In use again when the National Muzzle Loading Rifle Association holds its annual spring cham. pronsh1p match~ fi.1ay 18-21 a t Friendship. 0 M --=- = - ll appears that if. after the period of grace. captains of incoming ships "re willing to chance running through the. mines to reach North Vietnamese hu bors. no U.S. effort will be made to stop them . Cool Spills Over Nation We t We ather S1Jreads Ea st to Midwes t, Northwest Te1i1pe r n t1tre:c •11·~·· 111<· .... ~9""""' 80110~ 8u"•'~ C1t1rl,1•.., C1t1•l~1•, (It., .... C •~C!M11' cre.,.••~d o."'"' °"' lll&"f\ Otl•~I FO<'t W&rlfl Menolulu Moutft)l'I ll!dil l'.I PO(•• IC.1~t11 Cllv Lt• 11,.,., Ll!tl• 11ec:t Lro!tvll!• Ml111'1I "'11"'''*" M!n"ftllOl•t-S! 1'1111 Ntw()fl-1 ,.,, ... 'l'Otl Ot:!tl!!llTll Cltv /)Mithit ,.l>f(tdt1Dftl• """'"fr Pl!!~Of'I •0"1111\0 •lcllfl\o'ld l! Leu41 sin l•k• C1f\' S.11 l"•t"lh(I ...... W1111i11t'Oll t HI.It Lew Prt,. !0 '' I 16 " ,, 11 i' 'I Oii ~· ~I " " " " .. •• " " .. " " ~ " ' .. " •• " • ,, .. .. " .. " " .. " .. .. " " • n " •• " " • " " ,, " " " " " " .. " .. " " 11 • 11 " • ,, " .. • " " " " • • " " ~ • M " • " " " ., "''''0'-'•I Wt~!!'lll ~l t •lt l 1 011(-l~I II JAJI. 1~1 l ·lt• 11 3011 Cnllfor11la !kl•• wot !If '>•nnv 1/ld 1tmw1tur• ~11"1¥ '"' ........ WMl!llCl1y, fo!'K•Jlfl't .., Lew t leud1 l lfl"O l~t COit! 111 1"- "'*l!lflOt •M ltlt •' nr,111 wm 9h11 WIJI It t lllt ll WHl\t~lt llf 1' Ill 1.M • Ant11tt \il'ldlr tJ11r 1kf11, tl\t N1111111I w .. tP!tr SitNlt• .. 1.i, '"' '-'""ro111 llrjlt tor1a11t " IN Ji.. rJ .S. Summar11 Coe.I ""'9t1Nr ~ti.ii mr most et h1t 111tl011't Hll9"1 Ptlll tedtl' _, 1,_ llm111r1111ru " rrtt a. n m•rtr ..... ,. TP!t wtl Wt11Pltr ... ~!ell Mllklfl tM n1!Jo"'' mld1-ellon lo• 1111 1M 1r i.w d1vi mevftl 1111. b•lflt l.,. rt ln 11\d tllufld1r1how1ri fr!I'" tf\t Oftlo 1nc1 Ti n· "'5'" Yl lltVt lo !rte Citreliftl l l fld tou•l11rn N-1!"1l11·1d. Nt•rly 1n Inch •nd • 11•!1 111 •••n d•,r ct>td l nc:kl»u•n• Air J'e•c• l 1u ne1r Celumllu1, 01\la, du•il\fl Int "''"'· S"-" •lld ll\\ltlclt nl'wlwt" t lJO fttl an lhf N•ttr••~• '"'""'"~!• itfld Narlll Oeke!• ta W1slli"11!et1 t nd fll l"11 Of Ort C11111 Snt1w w11 mhed wlltl fM •tin 111 N rh 111 Monr1n1. "T ,,.. N1tlon11 Wt1tht• ~•rvlct r .. (tivftl !lf'll VRI •t 1Nl1"11 llff M~fldlV tn11t r1fft1 !ft ~>t«H 1! !O lftC ... \ l\1d Wt• •tc&l'tl.il I• 11••f1 at ~thtrfl MIHl!51!)111 Sund1y 11\d !UN!IY nlolll. Co••tnl !Uftny lod•v. L Jt t>t ~•ri11:tlt wifld1 nl•hl •!Id ""'"''"' llflu•• 11etamlno Wltl1rtv 11 fo U knet\ In 1f!•"'l!lln1 IMIY l l'ld WR111Hd1v. H•oh 11111•¥ ''· Ce-tlt l ltmMr1tur11. ••nt• ,,_ if I~ '' lnl•'lll '9m11itr1tur•1 r1n111 ,...., J5 Ill 1). Wtlt r 1-motrittu,.. 61 . .Sun, "'"""· Tide• TllllOAV • $f'(e<'ld l\lth l ;IS 11 m. l.J Stc!Jlld klw 1t~n •·'"· e.& ""''' lilt!! r:1r1t low 5i(Ot'ld "'"' ltcw 1- MOlllSDAV ···''"'·'"· i i , ..... Ill .. ' s1111 lti.t J rlJ 1"" ~se 1.111 f I l.,t9111 GI ·-h ,.,,fl ... ''" •·n r io1i r·oeri ltlm >:11 ,,,.,. ---.-...~.;:.· ;:;;M;;;,;L;:•~>· .- Ul'I T ...... 19 GI IN 'llETNAM LISTENS OUllTL Y, CARRIES 'llG STICK ' Soldier Ll1!0ft1 le Prooitlotlt While L11 nln1 on Hl1 Mochl ""11un r Tunney, who is opposing Kle indienst's confirmation , said loday Stev.·ard had bee n cleared despite his in terference with a fed~ral_invesligation of allegedly illegal contributions lo President Nixon'& 1968 campaign and other GOP candidates. But ~nother Democra tic liber~r on the comm1llee. Sen. Philip A. Hart of Michigari. 11a id in a separate st;itement !hat he was unable to ronrlude that the action taken by Kleindi enst was im· proper. WASHJNGTO:'I/ IUPJ ) -Procter & Gamb le. the soapmaking giant which said it "'ould not market h a z 11 r d ou s · detergents, has been told by the f ood and · Drug Administration ~FDA ) to print warning labe ls on Spic and Span cleanser ' a nd Cascade dishwashing detergent. : "We aren't sure what we arl'! go in11: to . do," a Procter & 'Gamble 5pokesman said. "We are awari or no 11ignificant In·' juries from these products. They 've undergone · the full range or our 1afety testing,"' However, the ,.~DA said Its tests irnfl· CA~ that Spic and .Span is a severe eye lrr1t1nt, and Cascade a mild eye irritant that is harmful if swallowed. Industry • 110urces u id both products lead their respective markets in sales. DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Dtf!vrry of tht Dally Piiot ts gu.1r.1ntttd M01111•y-l"r1t11-,; II )'Oii de rwtt ~•w reur IMW llY J:llO , ..... , Ctlr '"" VOU• CellY wHr r. ";::"' It "°"· C•!I• .... , ... .,, 1111111 litlvl"d~y l flO' IUftdtYt IF )'Ou de l'llll rKll'\ot 1'9111' 'ffV llY f it.,,,. J1t111111y er I t "' lunHy, ct ll 1nf • cooy wu1 bf llt111111111".; rou. Ct Ut 1r1 llkll'I ""Ill 10 1.m. Ttltphones =:11Z.~"t'un~1:ir!! :;:~ .... ' •• ~I ,.,.. Wnttnl1ut1r ...,.,,_ lit11 C/t....,,tt, C•tltll't~· l 11di " $111 J11111 Cl1!tl,itne, 0.11• llolf'!, llvftl U..-. Llltl/nt Hlfvtl . ..,... ' I c p ~ J t I • !. ' T l ~·t Un c lfj no ta g' •·u ex cil is sch It an Cal \VC sm lim Rid I pas na offi lhei unil n" i::h· pre. rac1 T Tege <:on Sta Cali Bak Coll Cali Ber Th their Sa Calif San Ca I.on Uni,· Ca Ange Univ Sa (:alif Sacr Sa Calif San Sa -C San Cal F'u\le Un iv Cal Ha.vv. Univ Chi Calif Chico Pre iforni San Coll Univ Cal Colle Calif Unive . Cali Colle State Pomo 411 'you Davi s Allegedly. h1 Va11 at Priso11 ·- SAN JOSE I API -An ox· c:onvict said he sa \v Angela Davis in a yello11· van at San Quentin Prison less than 24 hours before a bloody , courtheuse shootout several miles a11•ay. 'rhree prosecution 11·ilnesses previously testified they saw 1\1iss Davis and Jonathan Jackson in a yello\\' van across lhc street fro1n the courthouse about an hour earlier. on Aug. 6, 1970. The follo11·ing day. a rented yel1011• van 11·as the scene of a ' i;unb~ttle at lhe ~larin County Civic Center Jn \\'hich a judge, Jackson and t\\'O convicts were killed. ... 1 Mlss Davis is being tried for murder. kidna p and con· spiracy stemming from that Aug. 7, 1970 incident. George Jackson was to be traded for the judge and four other hostages taken at gunpoint from a courtroom by Jonathan Jackson and three convicts. Louis F. May Jr., a con- victed burglar and sex or-- rend er \Vho operated a , visitors' tram at the prison. testi_fied 1'.1onday he sa:\\' l\fiss Divoi•ce Davis and Jonathan Jackson U~I Ttl~te Actio1i leave the prison parking lot Sen. John V. Tunney fD-Calif.l \ras sued fo r divorce Aug . 6 in a yellO\I' HCl'lZ van. in Riverside County Superior Coµrt by his Dutch- r..iinute.s earlier, San Quentin born wife of 13 years, 35-year-old ~1ieke , \vho cited , guard Jack P. Scholle; testified "irreconcilable differences." A Tunney aide said that Jonathan Jackson and that his only co1nment afler beir1g served the papers Strike Loo111s Pay Bo<lrd. Cuts Longslioreuie11 's Raise WASHINGTON I AP 1 -A national dock lilrike looms-is a poss-ibility today follo\1•ing a Pay Board order lo <.'UI 15 cents an hour from raises 1von by !I0,000 East and Gulf Co;i.st longshoremen. Bndge.s of thr indrpendrnt benefits, 11•hlch 1'ar1 rs from ' Internal1onnl l.ongshore1nen·s port lo port. and Warchousen1en's U1uon. Boldt said for New ''ork and 1 Since lhe board cut back R other North Allnnlic ports the raise for Bridges' 13.000 n1en action t·uts the \vagc-fringt' last n1011th. he has strongly 111· raise fronl 12. I percent 10 9 8 dicatf'd he \l"Ould lead thc111 J){'rcenl. For !lh'11· Orleans it on strike lf Gleason does the brings the rniSI' do11•n from 14. same in East and Gulf Coast 5 percent to I'.! percent, and for llousto11. lialvrston and ports. D•ILY PILOT. G -1.0VE 15· .•• THAT SPECIAL GIFT FOR MOTHER WESTCLIFF rLAU NEWrOITEI INN The board voted fi..t ti.1onday nighl to reject a 7D-cenl raise In straight hourly pay. It said it 11·ould accept all fringe benefits and no n1ore than 55 cents an hour in_ straight pa y, "'hich is still somewhat more than standard board regula- tions would otherwist allow . Pay Board ch a i r ni n n othl!!r \Vest t~ulf ports ii C'Uts C:eorge 1-1. Boldt s;ud he <'X· lht raise fron1 13.8 percent 10 peeled the East.(:ulf 11·01·ker~ 11 ~ percent. .!~===~~~=:;:;:;~~~~~ to look over the culbaek . •·t.t· Str1c1.I~· applk'fl. the board's President Thomas ,V. "Ted· dy" Gleason of the AFL-CIO lnternatior.al Longshoren1en·s Association declined to com- n1enl on the action. So did lhe \\'est Coast leader. President 1-1 11 r r y standard pny rulf's 11·ould ha\'e disappoin!ed . and thrn ~u along i1·i1h \1'hat ha!> bccon1c allOw<'d only a ti 2 percent !hf' Ill\\' Of lhC land •• T~ll~l' Ill f/i(' II iJ g f • f I' 111 j.! t' pack nsr -s 5 prrC"enl for The cut br1nns do11·n 1h" "' 11:ig1's 11nd (}; ll<'r(·rnl for Who Cares? l\o othf'r nf'l\Sfl31Jf'I" in t h~ II 11rld ('8\'C! about \'OUT {'()Ill· n1unit,v like your eOn11nun11 v da ily n(>\\'Sfl."\llf'1' doc~. JI'!> the O,\ILY PILOT. rais{' in straight p11,1· r1·on1 l."1 frlll":l':> 1 prrcen1 to 12 pt'l't"l'llL llo!d1 _ _;,;.:;,;_.:_ ______ ..:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;~ said, Jlo\ve1·cr, lht' bo:ird 'I usually considers the rutal package or 11•nges and frin gl' FLORIST 19 Colleges Win Title 'U niversity' • Joan 11ammer visited George \\'as that he hoped •·for reconciliation.'' Jackson at the prison on Aug. -------'----------------11 SACRA~1ENTO 11\P f Thirtetn of the 19 Cali fornia f ''state L'O!legcs" have 11·011 thr ~ righl to becon1c • ' s t a l e universities.'' The decision. bv I hr Coordinating Council r II r Higher Education. 1l'as <1n- nounced 1\londay. The changes 11·ill nfficiallv lake place .June I. The 1972 graduates "'i ll have the \1·ord ''unil'ersity'' on their degree!'i. e"plained Don Ridenour, coun- 1 cil spokesman. The criteria for 1hr chanr.r is based largely on how the school:'\' compart-\1•ith the top 11 or the 22 accredited public and private universities in California . The si x that didn·1 nlake i! 11·ere sq ueezed out because or smal)er enrollnlenls a n d limited graduate progr:Hn!'i. Ridenour said. In 1!171 \\'hen thr Lcgislaturr passed a la\\• allo,ving !hr name chan~es. state collcgr officials ar.in1ed that most or their i n s I j I u t i on s wrre universities in e\•crything bul na1nr. The name ;·universilv" )?i 1·cR gradua1eR a d·rl e d presti!:!e and helps allra<·t faculty. they said. The si x remaininJ?: slate rol- lege are liumboldt Stale College. Sonoma Slate Collei:c. Stanislaus Stale Co I I e ~ e . California State Co 11 e t! e . Bakersfield ; Cal ifor nia Stale Colleg~rninguez ll ill~; and California State College. San Bernardino. The 13 state tollcgcs and !heir ne1v name.'>: San Jose Stale f"olle!;e - Cali£ornia State University, San Jose. California State College ;it f,ong Beach -California Slate Uni,·ersit.1·. Long Beach. California State College. Lo s An~eles -California Stn1c Universil.1·. Los Angele~. Sacramento State Collegt - California Stale Uni1·ersi11-. Sacramento. · San Diego State College - California Slate Unh·crsitv. San Diego. · Sa n FranciRco St<1tc Collr~e -Cali fornia State Universit v, San Francisco. · California Slate Co 11 e ~ r . Fullerton -California State Universit~·-r·ullerton. California State C o 11 e ~ c . Hay"•ard -California Stale University. Hayward. Chico State College California Slate University. Chico. F'resno State College -Cal· ifornia State College. Fresno San Fernando Valley Stale College -California State Universitv. San Fernando. Califoriiia Sta te Polytechnic C.Ollege. San Luis Obispo - Calilornia Polytechnic State Universily. San Luis Obi spo. 6 -and that Mrs. I-lammer didn 't appear to take part in the conversation bety,·een the brothers. J\·lrs. I-lammer. a \Ycalthy San Jose supporter of liberal causes helped organize !hf' Soledad Brothers D e f e n s c Committee. George Jackson 1\•as one of !he three so-called Soledad B rot he rs th en awaiting.. trial on charges of murdering a Soledad Prison guard. ti.trs. J-lammer is the n1other or Betsy Carr, whose husband James Carr \vas gunned down outside the 11ammer home last month . Carr , ~·as a. former cellmate of Soledad-Brother George Jackson. Pay Powers Petitions Submitted S1\CHA i\·JENTO (AP1 Alinost a million signatures supporting stiff curbs on lhc po11•f'r of California's governor 21nd Legislature over state pay inc:rcases ha ve been filed 1vi1h the 511 county clerks. employc offitr<i ls report. Pctilions bearing 922.r.42 signatures \rerc filed by the :\'lorlday deadline for the in· itiative f amp."1ign seeking a spot on the state\vide ballot in November. t he California State ~;mployes Associa tion sa L1f , "This is !he greatest ,·oluntet•1· petition effort ·in California election history," CSl::A President Dr. LeRoy A. Pemberton of San Diego said in a statement i\'londay. .. 1'he n1easure ll'iJI rcrnovl' poli!ics from the state payroll." Pemberton ad led . The proposed amendnlenl to I h e California Constitution \\'OUld strip the governor of l'Cto po"·er over slate employe pa ,v hikes - a po\rer exercised last yea r by Gov. Roltald Reagan. Reagan 's veto came a year after the legislature refused 10 grant any salary increases 10 faculty n1cmbers of 1he 19 state colleges and nine cam· puses of the L"niversitv of California. · Hurdle Clea red In Budget Ritual SACRAl\1ENTO (AP I Another key hurdl e in the an· nual state budget ritual has been cleared 11·ith a $7.8 billion spending program approved by the Senate Finance Con1- miltec -with a $150 million boost over Gov. Ron a I d Reagan's financing plan. The unan imous commi ttee :ipproval Monda~· sent !he budget to !he Sen<1tc floor. 1vhere Finance Con1mittec Chair1nan Jlandolph Collier (D-Yreka ~. said a vote may be iaken later 1his 11·eek. Senate corn1nittcemcn passed the budget aher re· jecUng 4-4 moves to abolish tuition at slate colleges and the l:niversity of CaUfornia. 1'hc spending pl<in \\'OUld Youttg Prof De1iied '73 Position SAN DIEGO iAP I -A radical young e co n o m i c s teacher at San Diego Sittle College \Von't be reappointed to !he fa culty next year despite recomnlendations on his behalf by the acting col· lege president . a faculty grievance commilte<'. th e economics department, stu- dent government leaders and an independent committee from the American Associa- tion of University Professors . Liquor Bill 111 Assembly 'Glenn S. Dumke. chancell or S,\CflAi\1ENTO <AP 1 -A ol the California St a I {' measure to give 18-ycar-olds Uni\'ersity and Colleges. said in a letter i\1onday that he !he satne alcoholic beverage believes Asst. Prof. Peter G. righls as 21-ycar·olds ls on it s J1ohmer has ''serio us l .v 1\'ay to the Asse1nbly floor . violated'" t h e professional The measure, a con- ~tandards he believes fa culty stitutional amendment pro-rnembers should maintain. Bohmer. 27. \vhose job ha s posal. passed the Assembly been up in !ht> air since last Constitutiona l Amendment s October . called the decision Conimittee by a 7-1 vole r-.Ion- "ao arbitrary abuse of po'ver day. by Durnke."' /f the 1neasure gets 111'0-"J've said all along that the chancellor's office \VaS lrying thirds approval Of both thC' to get rid or me by \.l·hatever Asse1nbly and the Senate. 11 means necessa ry.'' said the \\'Ould go on the 1"lol'en1bcr self-described ."revolutionary ballot so the voters could socialist. "'Now I've learned decide. The constitutional ;i111end- 1nent also "'OUld require !he governor's budget propos::il to incorporate p a y recom- mendations fronl the State Personnel Board. UC regents and state college trustees. ~!embers of the Legislature 1\·ould modify those recom- mendations only on a l\\"O- thirds vote of both houses. lhe total futility of trying to ,- "·ork inside the system. I've gone through all the pro- cedures they asked me t.o and I I'm still fired ." 1 HUNTINGTON BEACH · California State Polytechnic College. Pomona -California State Polytechnic University, Pomona. It also \vould require thnt nonwagr issu('s be settled b.'" collectil'e bargaining. Bohmer said he "'ould ap-l pea l lhe case to the courts. He , said he probably \l'ould remain in the San Diego area. FLOWER MARKET !-~~~~~~~~~~~~ -~~~~~~~-~~~~ San ' to ISCO. r-1 • 4 llme1 a day from Long Beach. Or smHe away Io Sacramen<o or San o;ego. Coll 'your travel 1gen1 or PSA 8nd ask ebovt our·e1 sy•to·bear, low fare. PSA glvn you a Utt . 17731 BHch Blvd . 847-9614 PAUL'S FLOWERS Optn 1 Days 24-hr. phon• tttvlc• 26:Z6 East Co111t Hi9hw1y ..... ,,. CORONA di! MAR • ·BROADWAY FLOWER SHOP '" COSTA MlSA "Pltttin9 you is eut plttlur•• ,nmpt d11lly tarvlc• lJSO HAR I OR IL VD. 546·1214 • 16JO 111tw M•cArth11r llvd., H•rbtr View C1t1tter e 644-4060 441 lmt 17th Strttt, c.,,. Me•• e 541-)414 HOURS Mo"-·Sat. '" W• Ho"or Sir Major Crlldit CardJ 546-5525 ndMom SUrpri FTD sweet surprise ·1 Place your order loday. Mom11 never expect anything like it. A beautiful FTO Molher's Day bouquet of bright, fresh flowers in a handsome, reusable container. It's a ceramit watering pitcher. Hand crafted and hand painled. lmporled from Italy just for this FTD Swee! Surprise for Mom . Your FTO Florist can send th is Sweet Surprise 10 Mom al- most anywhere in the Un ited States or Canada. Simply call or visit your nearby FTD Florist today and tell him where to send it. You'll find this Sweet Surprise for Mom-llowers ff~ in a gift container-usually available fqr less than T liillll-- FTD sweet surprlse'2 Or send Mom a hardy, green and growing plant .,. something she'll 1 cherish year 'round. What's more, we'll put the plan! in one of our im--1 ported watering pitchers to make It a t really special Sweet Surprise. Plant' in gift container-usually ~ • available for less than ... ,,--- DAILY PILOT E DITORIAL P AGE Prt1 dent Board Action The ne\v era of en vironmen tal awareness and de· sire to reverse the tre nd to"''ard irrevcrs1ble ecol ogic al damage fou nd ex pression in a<:tions by the Orange Coun· ty Boal'd or ~upc rv isors Jast \VCCk. 'f hc bo;:ird c:omnuttcd the countr. to preservin g open space uf Iota! and countywide significance in lncorpor· ated a~ v.1ell as unincorporCl ted areas. Serious negotia tions with represe ntatives of the owners of the southern 51500 acre s of the Starr l{anch for county purchas e and use as a natural recreational preserve were ordered by the t-iupcrvisors. The a~e~ is northeast of San Juan Cap is trano and east of f\11 ss1on Viejo. An d in a third en vironmental action. the board ordered a rcvie\v of the possibili ty of estabhshing a legal building se tback line from bea ch sand s. Set ting a future course of this kind is, <Jf course. desira ble . But to lmp!c ment it \viii mea n restructuri~g the tax ha se and findi ng millio n ~ of doll ars not now 1n the budget. It's prudent lo do all that can be done no.w to pre- ~erve natural environmen t for future generations. The ~npcrvisors are on the ri~ht track -if last \\1eek'.s ac· tion was more than just rhetorit'. Gray Has Muc h to Learn Oran ge Coun ty got sort of a previe\Y' glimpse. of the new ac ting head of th e Federal Bureau of lnve.sl~ga· lion abo ut 10 days ago. Unfortuna tely. the preview \va.s n't particularly enlighten ing or inspiring. L. Patrick Gr ay , Ill, then the relatively un hea rd of nominee for Depu ty U.S. Attorney General. was sent out fr om Washingto n to deliver a La'v Day address to Or· ange Co unty lawyers. men t plans for expediting court proceec:lin11, or for bringing equal justice to the lowest 1ocio-economic strata, or for better protecting the public from organized crime. Gray might even ha ve· been expected to cast &ome needed new light on some of the less-tban·reassuring goings on in the Justice Department lately. Instead, as it turned out, he 1pp1rently was here to do a little errand for bis bosses. He chose (or wa s asket!) to use his "Law Day" platform to calT)' on the adm inistration's continuin g effort to discredit the news med ia for ·'distorting" the news about the adminiatra· tion. Considering the 'ibad news" the Attorney General's operation has been making lately with its contradictory Lestimony an d incredible memory lapses in the IIT th ing, an d some embarrassing disclosures abou t the U.S. Atto rney in San Diego, perhaps Gray's use of his plat· form may fig ure -although he did feel it necessary t.o warn hi.s aud ience that his speech topic might seem strange to them. Hard er to explain is why the man who now heads th e FBI was not above employing some half-truths and di stortions to document his charges of "media distor· tion." 11is 1'"BI appointment has drawn ext ra scrutiny lo his speeches, and specifically to his admittedly 1trange Law Day message, for indications as to Gray's philo- sophical fi tness for his job. Gray has vowed to wor k so hard and effectively th at he wil l overco me his prese nt "political appoint- ment" handicap . With no background in law enforce- men t or Investigative \York, he has much to learn. On the other hand, he has the freedom to en.courage some needed fresh approaches to bring the FBI to a ne\v peak of service and effectiveness. Gray's audien ce of la\vyers mi ght reasonably have hoped for some high level insig ht on J ustice Depart· His first requirement will be to insure that the FBI remains above all .s uspicion of political taint. ''TEDDY, I DECIDED TO MA KE YO U DE PEOPLE 'S CHOIC E~ A cronyms Continue . to No Evidence Kleindienst Made De al Witli ITT . Proliferate Dear Gloomv , Gu An Attempt to Discredit President SYDNEY J. lIARRIS .John Stuart l\1111. a centu ry ago. ne::irly "-'Orricd hi1nseU to death bec ause ht: feared that the y,·orld of music was .. run - ning out" of co mbinations ol notl'S. and eventually no nc\V music \\'ould be able tn be composed. · J-lis fears have proved groundle.~s. so far, but anolhcr spectre of tbis sort looms on the horizo n -\\'C seem t.o be runni ng Jul of initi als ror institutious a nd or- o;::ini z:itions in !his 1gr: of lhe cxr~u1ding acrony1n. Recently, the FBI tvrnt lo court lo )vertur11 a Patent Of. nee ruling th ;i t 11 fo~rrnch clothini\ m:i nuracturcr c·ould use I.he lnilkll<> "f•"RJ'" "fl the inside of its goods sold in th e U.S. Afler a slob has thrown an empty beer, wine or pop container on your lawn. do as I do -pick up lhe container and eventually take il to a reclamation center. -H.B. M. f~,, le~r11r• r•llt cll •1Mltr1' "••WI, Ml n~(~Hl!ilJ lhOI• ot lht ntWlPIPfr, St nd JOUt ~·· , •• ~. " Glil'Omr G1u , D11ty ~1101. t1nique dictionary point out, acronyms are an an(;;pit practice -Roman soldiers carried;standard!'i engraved wJlh lhe Jet· ters "SPQR,'' standing in Latin for ''Senate and People of Rome." And they also nailed a jefri ng sign lettered ;.INRI'' ()Oto a cross in Judea -which mockingly read, "Jesus Christ. King of the Jews." Actually. FBI also stands for Federa· lion of British Industries. And 18!\-f n1eans Internationa l Bus iness Machines to most Americans -but not lo those 11·hv work ror the Int.ernational Ballistics Missile, or for members of the Intema· tional Brotherhood of Magicians. \VASHJNGTON -Whatever elements the Kleind ienst matter may have had in the begi nning, it has degenerated now in· to not hing more than an attempt to bring political discredit on President Nixon. The stronges t evidence of t h e degeneration is that th e oppone nts of the confirmalion of Richard Kleindienst as <i tlorney general are !hreatening a fili- buster. Th is merely means that th ey can- not expect to pre- vail any other way on an issue wruch shoul d be vo ted up or down by the Sen· ate wilhout undue del3y. Pro!racted and somewhat mawkis h hearings produced no e v I den c e 1vhatsoever th at Kle indienst entered into a deal for a court sett lement of an anti· merger suit against I n t er n at i-o n a J Telephone and Telegraph Company in ex- change for !TI' financing of the Republican National Convention. Nor was there any proof that such a dea l involved any other government offic ials. THE ITT SETTLE!\.IEl\'T, in fact. im. posed upon the huge conglomerate restrictions which the go v ern me n t previously could not get in court, and was a bad deal for I'IT. compared to the con- (RICHARD WILSON.) sideralion it had gotten in previous ad· ministrations. So the opposit ion to Kl eindien st. finds little logical basis in the rri: affair itself. unless one wi shes to accept unfounded innuendo as good cause for rejecting a President's choice of a cabinet member. Rea sons for Kleindienst'1 rejection run deeper. They lie in. the laW·ancklrder issue and the full scope of Nb:on's ap- proach to the aQminlairati91) of justice, the same issues. in fact, which were in- volved in the controversies over Nixon's appointments to the Supreme Court. BUT KLEINDIENST is not vulnerable on the civil rights issue. as was one of Nixon's rejected Supreme Co u r t nominees, G. Harrold Carswell. He is not more vulnerable than was Nixon's con· firmed Supreme Court nominee, \Vi lliam Rehnquist, ()n the mass arrest of peace demonstrators and strict enforcement of law . Kleindienst's political sin is that he car· r ies onward th e ban ner of h i s predecessor. John Mitchell , an d represents Nixon's uncompromising at· ti tu de on law enforcement and "st ne t construction" of the U.S. Constitution. The Senate considered that iss ue in the Rehnquist nomina tion, and resolved Jt in favor of the presi denital prerogative or C'hoosing appoint ees to the Supren1c Court. The Presiden t also ha" a prerogative of choosinc mrmbcrs or hi~ cabinet subject to advice and rons en! of lhe ·senate . 1vhich is rarely Jdversc. In the most recent exercise of ils \'Clo - back in the Eisrnhower adm inistration - the Sen~te imposed upon an eminently fit cabinet nominee as rank an injustiCc as partisanshlp affords. J lN THE PRESENT instance. there is reason for expectations thal a simila r in- justice will not be infl icted. After 11•rck:- of hearings anti politica l shu11'-off, kcv members of !he Senat<' Judicia ry Com. mlttee rrmai ned unshal;cn 111 !heir sup- port of Kleindie nst. Th ey \vcre Senators Robf>rt C. Byrd of \Vest Virginia, Philip A. fla11 nf ~1ichiga n , James 0. .E?slJaTid o f Mississippi and Sa m Ervin of North Carolina -all Democ rat s. Ir Senators Edward 1\1. Kennedy and John V. Tunney now wi sh 10 continue their political extra\'aga nza, they 'viii find them selves in conflict \Vilh more powerful forces. unles.~ th"Y arc ah!e to produce some kind of ne\\' evidence <1s a sensation in the Senate debate. OTl1 Elt\\1ISE they may be forced to f<1ll back on extenSJ\'c del aying tactics and filibuster. This is the part "'hich nHtkcs no scn~e and di!1rrcdlts the case ;igain~t l\letndicn~t. If 1h1'rc is new r1 idcncr ii should br. prndllC<·d pron1 p\J~·. ~I ~·.~! 1 f y 1 n g rr f('rt:nt·c~ to undue i11f\ucntr at !hr. \Vhilc llo11st> in the tase should be clocu1ncn led no\1'. and should ha\'c been documented. tf they exis ted. in the pro- tracted committee hearings. But this in· fl uencc 11•11s not shown to the satisfaction of kC'y 0Pmocrats whose judgment is rcspc clcd by !heir colleag ues. i\O 0 01.:DT Tiil-: Kennedy-Tunney rnn1b i11alion des ires to keep all l'C the l ~lclndicnst matter as Jon g as possible lo infl:imc public iinai;inalion ht a presiden- lia l elcc1ion year on a haneful alli ance bC'l1vcen big husincss and the Nixon ad- rn inis trr1t1on. But thei r \Veakcst li nk so r11 r is J\l cind1cnst himself. wl'io has not been sho\vn to be a part or such an all i- ance, even if it existed . Nixon could have picked a man easier to confirm than Kl eindienst 1vithout the ITT di\'er<;1f1n. He appointed frorn \\'il hin !he Justice Oe pa rtment to carry on the l\litchel l lr.1<li ti1Jn. Th;it is the issu e bfforc the Senntr. THE CO~IPANY. "Fabrication Bril Jnl cr nalional, •· has bern distributing its J;O\icls ovrr 1111'' \\'f1r1<1 for n1any yC'a rs, with the "f BI .. initials follov.·ing the full nan1c of l11c fir1n. Fearing confu.~ion . the F'er!rra! Burcn u or Investigation filed suil in lcdcral cou!'t to block the order. A fc\v monlhs ai;:u. I received a review t'onv of !he third edition of a book, '·A1-ronyms and lnitialisms Dictionary." 'l'h1.~ book fills 48~ double-column pages, and contai ris 110 l\O{l lcrms as compa red \l'il h only 45.000 tr rms in !he seco nd cdl· 11111. puUJi~l1t•d :1 n1crt· 11\'c years ago. "Al\1A" JS ONE OF the best known acronyms, but there are 25 such listed in this dictionary -including not only the doc tors. but ae.·on;iu ts. acoustica l people, arc her y manufacturers, automobile 01vncrs, n1achlncry 111akers, management consultants, 1narkcling people, ministers, m i ss io n a r i e s , motel 01vners, motorcyclists, monument bu i Id e r s , a r c h e r y manufacturers. automobil e 1n:1kers, and more. In addit ion. v.·e latel y ha\·e such "slogan" acronyms as "Tops," "l\-foms .'' "Pose,~' '·No1v,'' "Jobs,'' "Action," and hundreds more. Even such words as ··sonar." "radar ," and '·laser'' were orii:,:inaHy ac:ronyn1s The longest !rrm in the hoo k is ''1\0COillSU BORDCO!\I· PHIHSPAC,'' \\'hich is thr Navy·s .. short·fornf' nan1e for Adm inistral iv1~ Conirnand. Atnphibiou~ Forres, Ptirifi c ,.~lret. Subo rdinate Comn1and. That's J . S. l\1ill you hear turning over in hi s grave. Back of the Attacks on Utilities \~1tl1 th<.• prol1ft'r<J tion uf technology, and 11r.1v movcn1cnts in poli tics and en- ''1tOn111rnt. lhOu!;;Jnds of nc1v acr011}n1s h ·11(• cnm(' i1H<• tr;:!~(' lhe las ! f!'\I' vrnrs -some pro1·oc;1l1 1·c. sonic fu11l1y, ·sonn· Jll.~l foo!i : 11. Af TUALL \', AS Tilt: editors of this Russiaris Foiled in R ace \\'1\Sll!N(;To:\' ...l \\'nh all !hC' rlr:11na ,,, :1 TV..thr1tlcr. no 1\111crir;in hclieoplrr :inr1 Sc..\'1et lr,111·ler r;irrd :ii tnp Sp<'ed rr,·rnllv (or :i n11s~d1• r:i psulf' th:il had pl'lripr rl into th1· ~1orn1y Arlanlit•. 1 lit' dr an111l ic <!:i.~h l<MJJ... pl:u•e 011 ~larch ltl 11 1( 1hc \'11'gi111t1 JACJ( ANDERSON By EARL G. WATERS San Rafael Indepe ndent-Journal The attacks upon the public utility companies in recent months have reach· ed the point of ubiquitous absurd ity. Because they occupy a position of n1onopoly of sorts. these companies have been the bu tt of jokes, criticism and rcscntmenl ever since they became monopolistic. \Vhal is forgotten is !hat utility service C'Ompanles were nol ever thus. In the earli er days there were competi ng com- panies supplying elect ricity, gas and water in the same territory. BUT GOVERNM ENT determined that it \\·as economically imprudent to have duplica!e facilities and lines servicing <'u:-lomers 11•ilhin the san1e area. So it 1\·;i~ decreed that such services would be prov ided by on ly one compa ny in a given territory and !hat such companies would 1·oa~r. In :i h;Hr· hrt•:ld1h fh11sh. t/Jr be regulated. Today we have these \\'<IS a Soviet fishing ho:il. The &lvicl!\ regulated monopolies because of govern· ha1·e o;tlfi lled n1any of th ese ships \\'ith menl edict. 1·optcr triumpht1n1ly rl'!r1c1rd !he cap:;u!C' from lhr ocean a :·ouplc of niinulC'S hf· lnrr I he trf1 11•ler rr:t('hl'd the !'ipol the latest electronic monitoring equip-. And the ut ililles are regulated. The ·~ bo r· h I h . Public Util ities Commission oot only tells rnent. 111e ats IS or sea erring, -rttem what rates they can charge and die· mackerel and U.S. seC'rets along lhe tales the services to be,provided, but also Alnerit·an coast. tells !hem what profits they shall make Generally, utility stockholders receivl dividends about equal to those earned (In savings accounts. The missik' Y.a:> rircd on !\tarch 17 bv the National AcrOnaul i('S an d Space Administration t 1'\ASA I fro11 \Vallops Island . \1a. This "'as .1 classlfled miss iori for the Atom ic F:nergy <Almmission (AEC) to measure how f lOud moisture erodes projrclilcs, lncludlng A1ncric:i 's nuclrar missiles. AT Tii i:: APPltOACll of the traYi'ler. NASA hastily ordered a rescue helicopter into the ract'. The clatteri n~ copftr and lhe straining trawler al mo!'lt converged on lhc pri:ze at the same lime. But the topter reached the cnpsule ahead of the boat and dropped do\vn in the wn1't'S, u·hile the American cre1\• expertly fished the caps ult from the seas in the nick of Tlll:: S~fALL. cloud1cobing missile liinc. r snared Into !he atmost>here, then jct· At Wallops lsh1nd. a NASA spo ke11man ll~oned its capsule about 20 miles confirmed our 1ccount of the sta chase. affshore into turbulfnt international The trawler may have bten monit oring "'alers. T~e capsule oontoined sttret in· th e homing devlce, or the Russians may struments and a homing beacon. But ha\'e been attracted to the spot by the recavery from the high waves was im· hovering U.S. plane. But the spokesman possible. acknowJedg~ •·our guys we re uneasy." Next day, the waves had C'al med, but --Por the Russians to have fllchtd the the ht-aeon \lt'ils dead, f'or half a day. capsule u'ilh its rargo of American NASA plenes searched for the bobbing :recrets from under NASA·_, nose. he «Jn· object. f'inally1 a fixed·wlng scouting r.eded. "'ould have betn hi ghl y em· plane spotted the c:ipsul~ and hovered barrassing. "Dul .'" he said, "lhrrt'"!I protecti vely over II nothing "·e could h11vP. done. These were ttushln& toward lht c11psult, hr)iwe\•er, lnltrnaUon1I waters." . - THE AJTACKS CO~IE from bolh lho B11 George --- Dear Gwrge: I want to quit my dull newspaper \1•riting job and become a fretlanCl'. Do you have any tips on how lo go about this? BORED of.ar Bored: Yes. Before becomlna • f~ lance you must first ask youneJr: ''A free-lance what ?" Playboy ? Je\\•el thief? Plumber? This is Jm. ponanl I( you a.re to be a succtSSJul rree-Jance. Afy brother-in·law hu bttn A free-Janee for IS yean and stlll doesn't k"ow what line of work he·s In. public and some members ()f !he Legislature. Th ey are directed at rates charged and. in lune wi th the times. ac- cusations t!iat utility plants are endan- sering the ecology with poUutants. So serious ha ve the threats from the ecologists beco me that power shortages follo"·ed by unemployment loom in the future. Some in the Legls\ature ha ve betn sharp in their aiticisms of the rates established by the PUC and bitter about increases granted. They ig nore the fact that "'ages, mate rials and borrowing con· tinue to ri se, or that rate increases can· not put excess money into the pockets of the utilities since pro fils are rei;ulatcd. OTHE R LEGISLATORS have directed their aim at utili ty advertising. They claim that since there exists ;1 po"·er short ag e or the danger of such short age, utilities shouldn't advertise for 111ore business. They further c!a1n1 tha t since the utilitie!'i are monopolies there is n<1 need ror advertisi ng. 1'hey lhen contend that lf lhey do advert ise.they should not be allowed to take It out or the money paid by the consumers. Competition aside, utilities advert ise to !'itay in busines!'i.Thcy n1ust offset th e at- tacks of !he ecologists if they are to su rv ive. They must slri\·e to gel the be.st usage of avail<1ble po\rer. This n1enns creatlng a market for the huge reserve;; 11•hich pile up cluring off peak hours. GRANTE D TllE ,·erlising. the issue penditurf's shall be NEED of ho w charged for ad- ~uch f'X- is .silly. Regardless ur how it is charge d. the n1oney 1nusl cotne fr om the user. just as all oth er consumer advertising is finanred . \\'hat pn~slblc difference can it 1nakc \1hrlher the cos\s are dcducled R!I f'xpenses or fro m proHts? The fact re- n1ain~ the regulatory body recognize.'! that 1n1•cstors rnust make a return on thei r money. It has pegged the return <Jn in\·estment al about 7.5 percent. \Vhi le they do not permit more. anything shor t of that is grounds for a rate Increase. It 1vnu!d seem that .~omc of the 1 ru~s c~eated in lhe Legislaturr is me rP(y to dist ract fron1 the inadequacy of the la11'maker!I to de al 1v1th real problems. The attacks on the utihtics serre as " convcnicnl i:moke screen to co1·er the failures in t:ix reforn1, sch'lOI financr, and other major issues. Communists Twisted Marx Ideas Karl f\1an:: did nol directly advocate revoluti-On. violence. or dictatorship. The advocacy of violence and "dictatorship or the proleta riat" wall the Invention or Lenin and the Communists, wh o systema tically t'A'isted Ata ri to servci their own purposes. Essentially - although there are ccntradietions In Marx -Min; believed in historical dtivelop- mcnt, gradual~ inevitable. leading to a changed world. Such Is one aspect of the man who has btccme lfie world-w ide symbol of social upheaval and insurrection, as Jt emerges from Kari Man: on RevoluU01;1. a new e.1· hausllve book by Dr. Sall! K. Padove r IMcGr111-Hlll, 117.50; IO!L cover, ... 91). This Important work"l1 the first in 11 disllngullhed new seles, T1le Karl ~farx Llbruy. "THE VERY WORDS 'Man;ism' and 1~tan:lst' ha ve 1cqulred the connotation -iftdttd, the equJ•aJence -of revoh.,. Uoa, --tt ii lnltrpreled," th e author not.s. "To mllllona of people overy1'htrt. Man't Jecnlne head, with ill wild balrr butby belrd, fllshlng eyu , 15 (TH~ BOOKMAN ) in itself the syrnbcJJ of a revolutionist" This is the first work in ariy language containing all or ft.1arx 's direct or indirect writings on thl!: i.;ubject. f\1uch or the material. particularly the letters, are here transla ted into English for the fi rst time -by Dr. Padover. TUE BOOK CONTAL'iS. among olh.r selections or ~lane's wri tings. all the brochures, policy state.ment3, ootes, proc. lamations, speeches, etc., tn coMectlon with the Firsl Jnllrnatlonal, ()f which ht1 was a foundtr .and the leading splrll. It also throws light on the development and change lo hi• !hough!. The book incl ud es. both ~r a r 1 ' s theoretical writin gs en revolution and practical. day-to--day comments. r t documents !uch European movements as Chartism in England. uphca\'Als and 8QCjJUsm In Germany. insurrtttion and the Commune in f'rance1 and na:sctnt Rolshevism in.Jlussia. over a period or •o rears. roughly rrom 1842 lo 188.1, the year of "lilrx 's death. Caroline Harkleroad OiltANG! COAST DAILY PILOT lfobt rt N. l\rttd, Publrsltcr Thoma.$ Kc euil, Editor Albert \\'. Bott s Editorial Page Editor 'rylc edltnril!l l'llt;(' ()( the n~l!y Pilot 11cck., to lnl orm 11 nd 1t1mu. IAre readi•ri; by pr<'sf'nling th is nfl'A.1paper·1 011inions 11nd tom· mcntary on topics of lnlcre111 •nd 1lgnlfican(f', by providing a fnrum for ~h,. t'JCprHIUnn of Qllr rtlldtn" opl n1oni, And by IW'f'M'nlln..ir: the tt!vPrsc \iev.•pril n1a: ..,, h1Corml'f1 ot.. lt.'n·c~ And 1r10krsmen on topic. ot the do.)._ Tuesday, May 9, 1972 I I I I I Ju l , •• ,. SUPER ~~ '' Keeping Mbrm • with Winston's finer flavor · Just how good is Winston Super King? It's America's largest-selling . long cigarette. Th~t's how good it is! Yes, Winston Tastes Good Like a Cigarette Should. ' ' ' SUPER KING 20 mg."tar".1.3 mg.nicotine.SUPER KING MENTHOL· 21 mg "tar".1.5 mg nicoune.av pei cigarette . FTC R•oort AUG ·71. ' ( • DAILY PILOT L. M. Boyd Wl1y Go(l Made The Mosqt1itc;> \\'hy did liod 1n<1kl' rnosqulloc.~·· inquires I youthtµI North Carolinian. J don't kr10\1 . Do kno11• 1~h1t IDml e1rly American Indians belir1·cd. ho"·e1·rr. They preached lhl Great Spirit, they created the mosquito to pmtnt )'OW\t braves and ladies from spending too rnany unch1per- oned evenings togethl'r outside the camp. A11ybe. A~I ASKED v.h.\ so f('V.' n1•y.·spapers ptlnt po1lry 11nynlore. Oscar \\'ildc explained that: ··A poet can survivr anythlna but a 1nisprint " Still. it's too bad. 1be poet is reJcclc<l l ~t•sr days. Ae old Mac Eastman said. "In history h111 divine. but ;1 poet in the nc,,I room 111 1 JOkC' .. UllJ I SAY horse breeders don't ~ kn ow v.h\' rn:1rcs ttnd to foal at ~ nigh1 ~ They do. too. 1111 nothlna to do with nigh tmart'. incidcnta ll.v. \Vriles one of ume: "Now as at~·ays, a marC', \\•hen foalin g. is helpless qalnlt 1uch predalors as big ca ls. So her genet ic memory tell1 her to foa l in !he protective darkness ·· Reasonable. , Fl.IGJIT -No jokr., rhat clain1 the drive to the alr- i>ort is more dan~erous than thr flight in the 1ky. Oddi are 15 times highrr you·11 get hurl in a car thin In I plane. sa~· lh<' 1·on1putcr boys. A CUSTO~tEH in C;1sper. l\)•o reca lls an ROT<.: ln- :;prction lherc \\•hereat an officer look !he butt pl1te orr a rifle and a note popped ou r whi ch rc<id : "YOU sure ire snoo p1 Lieutenant ·· \lUICK AS half a fl ash. v.rilc do\vn five odd f~ure1 ·--ihar-add·up to 14. No can do-? fiiaybe--you·re t'fyUic Wll nun1hrrs ins tead of figures. Ans\1cr is 11 and three 1s. Cf;RTAI NL't' you're a Seaso ned Citizen if you remtm· ber v.1hat article or clothing actress Dorothy Lamour made famous in her movies. The sarong. Tire truth be, though, she only wore sarongs in six of her 40-plus Ulm1. Those sarongs cost n1aybe $10. Rut her 1vardrob e for the other pictures were vn lued at about $100,000. Point thl1. out to .1•our \1•ifc. mister. Clearly. it's neilher the number nor the expense of her dres~s thal m<ikes them memor1ble . Jll CCUPS -Best uure for hiccups known to date Is a spoonful of ordinary table sugar. So report medlc1I re· searchers at the Univer sity of Galifomia and the Unlver1lty or Miami. They claim that simple sugar trick work1 In 19 out of 20 cases of hicc ups. Musi remember th1t. \VOJ\1EN CONVICTED of capit al cri mes were not hanged in Olde England. Before 1789. at any rate. A mor1l matter. \Va:i; lhought to be unchivalrou s to danalt 1 1trl on a rope thus lo expose her bnre legs befort onlookers. A loalhesome indignity. r.xccull'd 11·on1cn for thl11 reason 11·ere burned at 1he slake . AllflreS$ n1(li/ tn I .. 1\/. Jloy1I, r . 0. Bo:r 187$, Ne1vport Beacl1. Calif. 92660. R ealignmer1t Urged Of Routes by A irwest WASH INGTON iAPI -The Civil Aeronautics Board has proposed to" consolidate and realign the route system of the ffoward Hughes-owned airline, liughes Alrftst. The baud bas given other airlines 30 days in which lo rile any objections to 1he decision affecting the 1 .1 s:epar1te routes or the San r~rancisco-based airline. Hughe& Airwest has con1- plain ed to tftt, board that its system Consl11t1 of little more than three roatt sys tems pasted together. Postmaster Gets Word Thr airline was born out ot the 1ncrger or three other airlines. PaclHc. Weal Co11t and Bonanza. The CAB said tbe airline 1nusl ma ke unnecessary stops now al rou te junct ion points even though nonstop service in \·ariou s places m11y be justified . The board pro1Xlsal con- ~olidaling the ll rou tes into a single unit, and modifying or eliminating \\'hat it called burdensome C<lndilions. The airline said the moves could permit elimination or unnecessary stops at con· gested airports such as Los Angeles and San Francisco. They could also save time and reduce fares. The CAB also proposed to \VASHINGTON (UPI ! make pe rmanent the ten1 · Becauae it's spring, the U. S. porary authority "'' h i c h Postal Servict-is advising it~ Hughes Airwest in he r i I e d 32.000 poetmast.trs about the from West Coast to operat e b1rds and bees. without restriction between The advice Is In the form of Portland, Ore.. and Seattle. ;i directive to ensure uniformi-Nonstop service 'l{l th a t ty in handling mail shipments market may prove pl-ofitable. of Jive honey bees and da y-ol d the board said. baby chicks lo reduce in-Frontier Airlines. Denver. :surance losses. opp<>s:ed the proposed changes Postmasters are being lold In Hughes Airwest's operali11g that shipmtnts should not bf' authority between Great Fall~. n1ade for distances over 650 ~1ont.. and Salt Lake Cit y, 1niles due to i n c r e a .ii n g Phoenix _and Tucson. Ariz .. likelihood of loss or da1nage and Las Vegas, Nev.. and during lhe spring increase in Spokane, Wash. mail shipping of bees and The CAB said Frontier's ob- .. QUEENIE By Ph il lnterlandi "When are the ecoloel1ll 10Jn1 lo clut .. 1o th• fact lh•I the hllh·poweredeaec:utJn,11 becomlna Plillct?" 'Worst Abuse• Shooth1g Victim Spu19 ns Aid, Die s TURLOCK {AP) -A young that Rowe had fi red only after n1an shot In a scurne with a he fell his life and those of 11tlt hl1hway poltolmen bled Rlckotll ' oomponlona ....,. In lo dtlth ofter fondln1 m th• d1naer. orrlaer't 1tlem'Ptl to render Muno111ld Rlckett1 and twb flr1t 1ld. lnve1ll gator1 11y . rompanlolll wen w1lkln1on11 Sherltt'1 Delecllve I 1 t . rural n>1d Slturd1y evtnln1 r1ll1 Munos Hid p1ltolm1n 1fter fhelr IUtO Wll dlllbltcf Mlehatl Ro we fired four 1hol1 and Rowe 1lopped because 1t 1f.year-old Donald Rlekelt1 Rlckett1 1ppe1red to be after the youth tried to arab behaving as If he were In· Rowe'• 1hot1un and bt11n to~lcated. ·1lrlkln1 him with the offlC'er '1 The officer 11\d Ricketts. 1 'Own nl1ht1tlck. I-foot , 240-pounder, tried to Rlckitt1 WI! wounded twice 1r1b hl1 shotgun from 1 rack In lht chest and In ont lea . In hl1 patrol car, then did arah Muno• Hid. The fourth bullet hil nl1htsllck. LAS VEGAS •••l's•• ... Meltl -• .,,,, l ... ,,_ 1,000 t1 .. 11• tl1 Strl• N11t •ta• SUr,u1I H1tel, Cltc11 Cltcll "4 ~iYitr• o,~ '•• , .......... •DVCBD ,.~ WIN'l'BB B.l'l'BS! WT OMANCI! WINTll UTIS lXPlll MAY 25, 1971 lltnlk S,et1ll -$toljlJ 1•ro'fll Thwd11 Ot 214 S,ecill RHIRS Off1r1d at Lowest Winter R1t1: '8IO.SIO!!. '12~~ ... .:.... tPf.,ll fOIJHWl( OV11 IOO Other Rooms ' Suites Startlng •I $2.00 }.ddlflo,,.r On'''·· Sal., Holldays & Summer Se•son, Add $2.00 < Al 1 ; REE NOW ... NO NEED TO WRITE' . ' : '·--. -._-: . .--, --.~ ·~· ; -; t" _-' •• __ , ... ml11ed. Rowe 111ld 1 1cuf!le ended · An 1utopty 1ho~ed that with Rickett.I 1wln1ln1 the I : . , , . . ' ' DIAL FREE 1-800-648-6898 Ricketts bled to d11lh, and night1tlak, 1nd th1t he ordered t tel. no cost to 1~11 Iha! the woul!dl would not the youlh to b1ck off. After -111$ COUroM TO flOMT OESlt WllH YOU CHICK JM htve been,f1t1l II ho had tiol (ending off two nlght1ttck . ·~ UPER FUN PACKAGE I Jnttrfered with llowo'i 11· blows, Rowo said he flrtd h~ • templl to 11ve aid Munos hand1un . Rowe aurtei-ed only ' 1:-i11111•,:::"-.J! TJ:\'!.:::tf., J:'a!;. "::.~" 1ald. Dettctlve1 11id 1t one brulHs from the atlck, Munoz c.:...... rmrtt'. .. W ""',.•,. .. ..,ii'"·' point the 1tru11llnr Rloklll• 11ld. No char1" were filed . 1 frN IY, 11 ,Ills, 24-lor. lulllrllf. 1111% 1ir """ l1dn41 rlppod off 1nd lhrtw 1 bloody 'l'Wo of Rlck11t1' compan lono If f1111r 111ts. -· Maslw CU.Ci. P;Jot 5/9 comprtu, which 1lruck tht of-told detectlvn ht! had been fleer In the c11>11. actlnr 111n1ely durln1 the Munos 1ald St1nl1l1u1 Coun-aftii'noon, 1t one p o I n t Anderson to Tackle ·-=·'_d_•_t .. _,_, •• _._w_._,._,_._n•_l .. _ed __ t11r_' _ .. _h,--'••_•_,_,h_•m_w_1_1h_1_._u._k.1 WESTW!RDHC FBI File on Stars STOCKTON tAPl -Colum· dent Nixon "w1nts to delay a nlst J1ck Ander10n 1ays he toluUon to the Vlttnam War pl1n1 to write next about untll after the November •lee· ti' tlon." · secret rBJ lnve1U11tlons into 'Hit lddreu eovtrtd 1 wldt the prlv1t1 1rf1lr1 of suc h rant• of topla from llCNCY stars 11 J1ne P'ondl, f.-larlon Jn 1ov•nm•hl to I.ht Id· Br1ndo, Rock lludao n 11nd Jot mlnl1tr1tlon of President Lyn· Afv1rtll1m1t11t Now .••.• PlasticJrum,=-=--+- lnventiiifor Artificial l .... _ ·~· ·~· ..... TW ... "° "'"" :V!OTEL &. CASINO 7'1';:; io:;, Vegas BL, las Vega1, Nevada 69109 .. , i. I ... ·; I· •,,, 6 '." ,,,, C '•' OPP•• rot •,.,,"·''• Artifldll T ....... Felt lh•l.ba1 reYolullonlltd d11tur• '-..llllLllllLl!LJ'!!<...,!!!.1'0.~c!C~~!!O!".!"!!"!!~:!.'~'~'~'"-------/ •-lrl...A-11 •..a-wear1111. ........ -••• It lell you biteh=:·-bot-I=============:=:======== Now.Corlhefinttime,tcif'nceofftrf a ttr, eat mOl'e natural J. PllOblrrt J: fl•tlccrumlllatholda denturts a1 la11l1 fOf houra. A• 18oiltUJ'I, .....,Wfore-formtanelutM:mem-Dentuna that flt .,. ••~nt to K"d L•1 t A I A d bnne that llr/pJ ioU ,..,,,. ,. '"• health. See yuur detltilt •rlJ. I s I re 0 s r n y ""'m•Wn•U •!,..., -··" 1t·.. "''UOY·•~"·........ tun " " unique diacoverycalled FtxOD!NT• Adhe1iveCrum. Nam1th . _!d~on~Jo~h~noo~n~·~~~~~.!:::=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=;:::;:::;;;:::;;;:::;:::;::::=:....::....:=..~~~~~-===:....::=:=:=...; "The files the FBI keeps on such well known person11Jtle11 111 the worllt abuse or 1overn· ment power I see todly," Anderson told a newa eon· fertn'ce before an addreu here at tht Urllver1lty of the Paclrlc. He said FBI 11mll hi•• gathered lnfonnatlon about the st8rs' aex llv•, polltkaJ activities 11nd buslntll 1ffalr1. Ander1on added none of the 11tar11 I~ suspected of any crime11 no r 11 any one likely to com mit 1 crime In ll1ht of their career11. The FB I hll "thick lllOI" on the 11t1r1 "1nd just about every bl1ck leader In the country," Ander10n 1aid. "Why I• the 1ovenunent houndlnl Miu Fonda, that mere 11Jp of I llrl?" he ukld. "Her 1ntlw1r. pro.peace per!ormancu ire w h 1 t America Is all about." Anderton, who won 1 Pulitzer thia year ror column11 dealina with HCl'et 1ov1m· ment flle1 on the Ind.ii· Paklllln conflict, 1akl he h11 cople11 of the FBI f(\el. fie later told an audience of ·abOut 1.200 persons that Presi- Sinatra Wi1i~ Case, Apology HOLLYWOOD (UPI I Frank Sinatra has announced ''mutual stipulation" providing minimal judgment to him in a dan1age suit against I he publisher of a \1:eekly tabloid called Midnight. The agreement ended the !linger's suit, filed in October, 1971, in U.S. District Court in New York. aga inst the i tld· night Publishing Co. In addition to the "minimal dilmages." the amount of \l'hich \\'as not disclosed. the publisher agreed to make a substantia l contributio n to the Martin Anlhonv Si n a tr a tl1edical F'oundation. Palm Springs. named for I h e singer's fat her. Jlllie not • JUSta m er e Every one of our thousands of account holders is a real person, a r cry jmportant person to us at Mutual Savings. We offer many free services to our savers, in addition to paying the highest interest on insured savings. WHERE YOU SAVE DOES MAKE A Dll'FERENCEI 5 OQ day in. to day out 1 riwbook saviop 53/0Q ocey~rtcrm 741 $1,0Xlmioimum 60(, twcycarterm ' $5,0Cllminimum MUTUAL SAVINGS I nd'°'" mocittlon l'hicks. jections 11•ere without mer it. ~iiiiii~~ In a published apo logy. the magazine said it \\'as making the contribution as a "further ex pression or regret." Corona del Mar: 2.86tEast Coast Highway/ 675·5010 Otberolliccsin Covio2, W"tAicadiJ, Pasadena, Clcnd•le udCaop P.W.·Clwswor..Ja IS THERE AN Y ADD IT 10 NA L EXPENSE FOR C.ONDUCTING A FUNERAL IN A CHURCH . INSTEAD OF YOUR FUNERAL HOME 1 by EUGENE 0 . ll~•UON W. ll6e Mt .-. • .me clriert• fet" cMdttUI .. • ....,.1 ,,.. • dlef'U .., .. • .... ; ......, h ttter. _, •Eh'• er,_ fer ..a .. ewi h"'91 He1119, A ._... .. • •1111111 ................ tM ,t1C• It It ......... wi ce ....... M "'e tre4ltf ... 1 ,., ...... ,. .. , .... ., ... ...., .... t..4.• WMt. • f•!Mf.. k t• rte Mltl• ,.._,14 ~ ........ ... fM ,.,...,._ ,_;,r, _.; tNlf cl•f'fY-· O•r tlri•pt'I 1, •lw.-,i ...Uelfte te tMN wfle ..... It ...... efftl&.ttei ., wh p~ te lriOff tlri.ir 1.nic11 I• ••r f11""'9 H .... Wt tlilfl 11111 e11 .. a; ;I I ... ........ If YM .. .,. • ""'11011 •bo•t f•11•r11f ~k•, ,1 .... wrlM or cell. .,...... •='hb. queetle• win M -.'ftf'ff 111 tlrih coh1t1t11. Balt=·Bergcro1a f'11neral B0tne COSTA MISA CORONA dtl MAR '46-2424 2 LOC~TIONS '7l·'4SO ". ~ ... ~arolo • ' I I "'8h11e1 I • .. • ' ' f ' i • : 0 ' ~. c I " " " e • v ' v o· " c .. ~ .. c " . . .. ' ,. " ,, " "' " ,, .. ,, "' .. .. • ,. VO N • • fl " ( a i s B .. .. ,. For Tl1e • Record Dissolutions Of Marriage Death Notlce5 ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCLIFF MORTUARY 4%1 E. 17th St.. Coslr ft1es1 14M88& • BALTZ BERGE ROS FUNERAL HOME Corona del Mar 673·9450 Costa Mesa 646-UU • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway. Costa fties1 LI 8·3133 • McCORMI CK LAGUNA BEACH MORT UARY 1795 Laguna Canyon Rd. , IM-9115 • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery ftlortuary Chapel 3500 Pacific View Drive Newport Beach. CaJilornl1 144-2700 • PEEK FA~ITLV COLO~lAL FUNE RAL HOME 78fl Bois a Ave. Westminster 893-l525 • S~lITHS' MORTU ARY 127 Main SL Huntington Beacll 536-WI 0 4;:'.'e..(_ ,, . ' ' N-4 n oortl••r•1 MoyM 11ot, t111t tllet'•'• 011 old ,..,1119 thllt ••err ky .... o .... Y••'ll fl1ul ,..,.. ef oil llhuk ..,..,.hH 111 our cl•siflelllll teetln . (And if 1101t insist on art aardvark. you 'll find one in th1 DAILY PILOT'• Su1uUi11 comic sectlO'tl i,1 Boner'• Ark.) Coast Districts Earn U.S. Funds SACRAiENTO -Si x Orange st school districts are sch uted to recei"e federal fu ds totaling $616.398 for lhf' im provement of the ir vocat ional e d u ca t ion pro- gr11n1s. \V i Ison Riles. s tate superintendent of public in· struclion. sa id the n1oney comes from the National Vocational Educalion Act (lf 1968. School dis tricts are being notified for their allotments to allow for advanced planning. The Oiasl Community College Dis trict is scheduled In receive the major share of the local grant v.•it h a disbursenlent of S.133,761. Cory Thon1pso~n. assistant chancellor of busin affairs. said about 10 p cnt of it v.·ould be used to improve pro- grams for students wit h im· paired hearing at Golden \\'est College in Huntington Beach. About 75 percent would be LEADS HEART UNIT Veterin1ri1n Sattler Fullerton Man Heads Heart Unit SA N T A ANA Dr. Fredric k P. Sattler of Fulle rto n has been elected president of the Orange Coun- ty Heart Associat ion. Ou!,i!oin~ president is Dr. Floyd L. \Vergeland of South Laguna . Presi dent-elect 1s M rs. \Villiam Zschoche of Orange. a registered nurse. This is the first time in the county Hf'art Associ11!ion's history that a woman has been elected to the presidency. J\'frs. Zschoche is super11ising nurse at Orange Co u n t y ~ledica/ Center and organized the H e a rt Association's Coron11ry Care Unit Com- mittee in 1965. Or. Sattler, a veterinarian, established a center teaching the use of electronic medical equipment !or the association in 1965. Cal State Curbs Dogs 011 Campus FULLERTON -Dogs will no Jnnger be. able to frol ic unallended on the Cal State Fullerto n campus under a stepped-up enforcement of "leash law s" by President L. Donald Sh ields. Under his recent order. dogs must be secure to 11 lea sh or chain if brought on campus and cannot be tethered unat· tended. They can be .confined to aul omobiles and \\'hen brought onto fhe school grounds they must ha ve \'alid licenses. "The health and safety ha zards associat ed '" i th unrestrained doii:s have in- crea~ed during the past year,'' Sh ields said. used for the support of ex- jsting \'OCafional:technical pro-- grams al both Oraoge Coast and Golden \\lest · colleges, \Vhile 15 percent \\'nuld go to projlrams for I he disad - vantaged, also on both cam- puses. ~e xt in line is the Hun - tington Beach Union High School Dis t r l c t, rtceiving $136,976. Other local school district!!! scheduled to receive allot· n1ents are Laguna Beacll Unifi~d School Di strict. $8.226: Ne"'port-Mesa Unified School Dist rict, $78,480: Saddleback Community College Distric!, $36.599. aod Ca p i s t r a no Unified School D is I r i c I , $22,356. Officials in earh of these school systems indicated their funds would be applied toward new equipment purchases, maintenance of current voca· tional programs, development of ne"' cou rses. or a com- bination or these areas. The allocations were made by the state &ard of Educa- tion during its March 12 meeting. Distributions a re based on a di strict's student population and 3n equalizal/on factor that lakes into account relative district wealth and the previous committment to vocational education: Lobbyist l To Discuss / Education SANTA ANA -Current !!late legislative a t t [tu des toward education will be the lopic of an address of Dr. Patricia! S. Hewitt . legislative advocate. at the Oran~e Coun- ty Personnel and Guidance Association dinner scheduled for 6:30 p.m. Thursday at San· ta Ana College. Dr. He11•itl serves as lob- byist for the C II I i ( 0 r n i a Personnel and G u i d a n c e Association. Ca 1 i f o r n i a Association of School psychologists. Ca I if o r n i a School Nurses Association and California Speech Therapists Association. N111ion111Jy Dr. Hewill rePresenls the National Association of School Psychologists. Information regarding 1he reception and dinner reserva- tions may be obtained from Dr. David Jordan, Santa Ana College. telephone 547-9561. Dog Shots Available Baby vaccinalit;>ns costing $2 will be available at clinics in 2.1 Orange Co u n t y com- munities between ~.fay 10 and June 8. Local laws requ ire that every every dog between four months of age or older be vac- cinated against rabies and licensed. The clinics will be open from 7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. at !he dates and locations listed be\O\Y ; Costa ~lesa -Orange Cou n- ty Fairgrounds. 8S Fair Drive, May 17. Fountain Valley -17737 Bushard SI., June 8. Irvine -Univer.~ity Park Shopp ing Cen ter. Culver Drive and h-tichelson. June 7. Seal Beach -Sea l Beach Fire Department. Eighth and Central Avenue. J\.1a y 23. San Clemente 0 I d Firehouse. 10-4 Aveni d a Miramar. !\.lay 10. Lafluna Niguel -Crown \' a 11 e y Elementary School. 29292 Crown Valley Park'il•ay, June fi. Mission Viejo -La Paz Plarti,, La Paz and Chrisanta, May 25. . San Juan Capislrano -San Juan School. F.I Camino Real and Spring Street. Mny 30. Tustin -~1arket Basket Parking l..ot. 650 El Camino Real . June 1., Ueisu re \Vorfd Laguna H ill~ -Cortese Stables. El Toro Road ::ind Moulton Parkway. J\.1ay 23. "0.W r.11 •• 1,.. o ... r •• 1.,., A •r•~•~• f•v',. f.., llN'' BONG KONG CUSTOM TA1l01$ & SH!tlMAl(l t5 !N OIANOI COUNTY ,ll MAHIHf IHOWIOOM 2 SUITS <1J5 DOUI LI KNIT ., l'l(l&I ,11(1 l•t· NOW o..~tt •~11 ,,,.ltJ t st IHI M•~tlr ••• , • ·ti •S , .. ~..... ....... .. .. ·~·····:~ ........ , •t 111\Wffl '"'"' IJ St S~I"' """""' 10 t ., ... """". ""'' 1000 ft!Ult llll~llt WOO~IJOjl & tOlrlll ICltlfl SPRING SAU SAYE UP TO 50% ., ,;..,, 1,u.,9411 c..i ... "'-• '"'"• s..,.u ..... 51••••. l~lrt1, • WI JIT ANT 1111 • ANY tTYLI CO,llO • Pttll ALTllATIOHI • IAIT rAYMIHTI .BB ·-""· ..;_ J.-Nt ••• SADDLllACIC IHH 1..0 f It!, S•nt• ""' 111~11"• !•1 llH Barber Sane, Will Face Arson Rap 4 Police, ·Pair Sued By Won1an SA.'iTA A';\A -A \\·oman "'ho claims she Y.'a!I unla"·h11ly ('\'icted from her homt by her estranged husband flld his \\'Om11n companion after !he pa ir ca!Jtd Ne\\•port Beach police to the pren1iseS wa nts more than S3 mllllon from lhe rouple and four Ne \.\·port of· ficers. ~trs. Shirley L. \\'at.son. 907 Sandr:u;tle Dri\'t. clain1ed in her Or11nge Coun!y Superior •Court action lhal shf' y,·as unla\.\·fully ejected from the hon1e lasl Aug . 5 de spit e court orders in her f11\·or . A scuffle al the S;tndt'as tle SANTA ANA Barber hornr, ~1rs. \\l;:i.ison si\id. Ricky Star has been found ended ·v.·ith her in Nr1l'port sane in <1n Orange County Beach city jail on assault i\lld Superior Court jury \'erdict · h h lh11t \\•ill send the haircutter to lrespllssing c arges and er 13-year--0ld dauj!hler booked !rial on arson charges. 1nlo Juvenile' Hall on trespass- Judge Lloyd B I a n p i e d ing 11Jtegat ions. ordered S1ar, 38, of Garden ~rs. \l.'atson said all the Gro\'e, to face !rial Mav 15. rh<irgcs h;n·e bc('n dismi ssed The barber, ll'ho ls still in n1unici pal court. She added locked in a longstanding dis· that she ha!! now regained putr \\·ith st;ite officials \\'ho possession of the hnmP. regard his constanl undercut-Shr seeks damages of ting of n1inimum halr cut $1.681.000 from !ht> Cily or prices as illegal, is 11ccused of Ne\\•port Beach on e1ltegations · "setting a blaze that gutted an of false arrest. fal se in1· Orange cocktail lounge last prisonrnent and assault 11nd Jan. 7. batter\'. Shr seeks an almost lie is being held in Orange identiCat su rn from ht r Cl:.iUi'll y-J a11 · · wtth · natt · -srr·at--estTanged· husband; ·Simton E. $50.000. ' \\'atson, and Elmina Price. DAILY PILOT 8 State Tiu Apportionttaent Cou11ty Receives $21 Million SACRAM~1~TO -~I n re th11n $21 million has bten rtturntd to Orangt County And 5€'\'Pn cit ies from 11'\t S!alt in rtc:t'nl appor tionmenl.3 of v11nous state taxe!. The largrst lump of S9.3 millfon Y.'RS distribut~ to the. ('(lun1y 11s a rtim bursement 10 1(1('1\I go \·C'rnmenl fnr !he $750 ho1neoy,·ners' properly lax PX· Prnpt 1on rstablish ed by the Le~islRt ure in 196R. The cnun ly wit! dh·1de the rt>1mburserne(ll an1onJ.! !he r1t1rs. schools and other lax inA: bod1PJ1. In 1111. lhe st alf' hand~ uul $231 million in thr prop- cny 1 ax exPrnplio11 rrim· hursP111ent. Uis Angrl r!! L'oun· ly r~:ei\•f'(i $50.:t 111 l!l 1011. Aboul $7 4 rn ill11111 "·a~ returned In Oran~e Cnun1~ 11 s its share of the stale-collected ''in lieu" vehiclt licf'nse fres a ccu mul11led bt'l11·ttn1 December, 19il, .1nd ~1Rrch, 19i2. Thal e~ise lax lakes !he place of local pr<Jpcrl .r tax on motor vehiclf'S. Except for 11d-1 ministr<1lh'f' rosts. the monf'y is relurnf'd In !hf' local government. v.·hich m11y use the funds fo r ~ f' n f' r 11 1 lain \'al1e\'. 1291 ,000 . Hun-Costa Mesa. S.19 ,00I'>: Foun- hnJtlOl'I Bt11rh, S 8 ~ S , 0 0 0 ; lltln V111ley. $13,000: Hun-- lrrint, S\25,000: Laguna lington Btac:h . S4'4.000 ; Irvine. Stach. ss.1.000. $4.000. Also. t\ewport 8 e a r h, And Laii:una ~1 r..h, 16,000; S.138.INJO: San C 1 rm t n t t . Nt~·port Beach. $24,000: Sa1' Sll3.000. and San Juan Cltmente. $6 .000: San Ju1n C . I '" OOtl C,1pi~lrano, S2,000. apl!i rano . .,.,.. . 'p;OiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiiii An A pp o r I io n m r n I ()f hii;:hwa)' u.oi.er la>it5 ~a \'t Orange Count~· SI 5 mill1nn. The sPven c1!1es rtre1\·ed lhe follo"'ing : o:i~1a ~les;i, $1\f\.OOO: r oun- t:un \'alle~·. S.'12 .000 . Hun- llni.:ton BtRc h, S 153 ,000 . ll'\'1/ll', $23.000. And La),lUOll 81".~l'h, Sii.000: San l'lf"n1rntf'. $21 ,0011, San Juan r.1pi.o;trnno. $7,()00 ('i!!:irt>llt t a x rnllect1on rrturnrd $27,000 to the counll' and !he fol lo"·in~ ;imounts 10 LOVE IS ••• NOT FORGETTING MOTHER Orange Co11st cities. -.·--1 J(.(k) tnhA HARIOI CEHTIR WlSTCLl,F PLAZA HrWrOllTlll IHH pu rposes. Distribution is based iJCo If••"-• c."'"' . C•1li Me••, C1IOOr"ll a TAKE THE l'iEWS QUIZ on pnpulalLon. Ph. 11141 t7t-.ZJ5J Local citie!I rrcei\'f"d !he 111 , s. ••Mkh"'"' 11, We Dare You .•• ;~~~;ing amounts or "io litu " --~~"f}'1'1;· ff6~~1;-0-E-ve r'j'-Sa-tutclay - Cos1e1 ~lrsa, $480,000 : J.'ou n-111llll•_!_flllll_!l•••_!_!_lltl_!1_•_•_••1!11 _ / - ... .,,. .. ~·~ . ''" . • \Ve suggest you treat your telephone directory just mark the pages with paper clips. Best of all, tip the that way. con1ers with colored tape. That way you'll ea sily find the numbers you use Underscore individua l listi ngs wi th red pencil or regularly. draw through th em with a light yellow crayon. Then Here are two tips: your numbers will jump right out at you . Identify the pages on which your regular numbers Don't worry about defacing your phone book. We'll are listed . Do this by folding down the top comers. Or, see that you get a fresh new one every yea r. liji#I GEnERALTELEPHDnE It's not the sam e old line. • A• DAI LY PILOT s OVER THE COUNTER ' EJWIC( Wig s Flipped WASHINGTON ACCOUNTS PROTECTED TO s10,000.00 Ac counts protected up to maximum of $10 000 00 by THRIFT GUARANTY COR PORATION of California only as provided in the California Financial Code ON $10,000 90·DAY FULL PAID THRIFT CERTIFICATES .,.,_.. ,.)'lw. monlhl1 A copy of Chapter 8 {Guaranty of Thrift Accounts) of 01v1sron 7 of the Cahfo nia Ftnanctal Code may be obtained upon request THRIFT GUARANTY CORPORATION OF CAli FORNIA IS NOT AN INSTRUMENTAL ITY OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA. COSTA MESA 270 fart 17th St. 92627 64~153 omces Throuahouf C•I rornl• f en information 1 n th£> atock or Toyo T ogyo Co 1 '°'"1 •S Apr It 72 Call Roy Bartholomtiw Grr11-l P11c1 f1r.: Secur1t1es 17291 Irvine Blvd Tur;tln 714 -832 8000 We are pleased to announce that our New Office m Newport Beach will open m July. Watch for announcemen t of the opening date. To be localed 1n Sulle 730 AVC O F1nan c1al Center 620 Newport Center Drive B&temu Eicliler. Hill Ridiards ll'<COJIPO.llAl!D Mtlll!Jtft. New 'l'o t Am•ri,111 Paelfit Cou t & Mlcrw.tt $lock l~ctlllllgll FOR INFORMATION PHONE (7H ) 6•0 1•60 MANUFACTURIBG AND QXEROXING 0 ANSWER ING SERVICE 0 DESK SPACE tEOS '(O\)f. t' 0 SEC RET ARIAL SERVICE 0 l.A LINES 0 TELEGRAMS, TWX, O(XUMENT TRANSMISSION 0 BOOKKffi>ING 0 MIMEOG RAPHING 0 MAILING LISTS COMMUlllCATIOllS SEIYICI IUIEAU "'to•lltr ce...,.u,,.,. M YOUI c~ llVINl·Alll'OlT INDUSTllAL COMPUX (71 4 1 147.7777 (2131 a10°t3t3 COMPLETE-NEW YORK STOCK LIST ".. "" 1...._I Ml:tll L .. Clht Cltt • .... ... , .... J ...... u. , ... Qe. l N1!S " ' ' "" N.O Nt•" N .. ... ~[;¥ N•wn Nwo N wm N 'r'Ho N YSE N YsE NYSE N a~~ N •M "" ·~ fl.;llV.p ~L' !> tH,,T C NO O No o No > NA < NAM N AM .... NOAR NARk N~> ·~" r.10 Co Nol G N Oy> ~o~b " G ' " N SP11 N "'' Pp . " "" hll N m . " N IA I .... NwiT I ti wit ,..,....,, Nw.. lp r w~ll Nv.o,l,ul Nw11 S N<r ¥SIS r.io nC NotSm . " "" P~c C.01 P ac Ll9 p "' P11cPwr P lC PW Poe~ .. \! P r.-.T Pc 'T& T p ' P<11~PI p ' P Am p ,. P.:inl>d p ,, P(I 91, p .. ,,. P"' ~Hn p "'"" Pc~l'J G P t 11n P~nnf'1 Pc D A Pf'n'I p .. Pennl'l •" P Plot p • P~nn "r. " 0 Pt~n r J p ' P"C ID p P~:>• Co p '" Pe Inc p ' Pr e s p ' •• p ' Pl''' P , D Phi a(I p P11 E pl p~t-~· p "'' .,, p " P E pt ' " 1>1'11 j>.\ ' ' " P1' nCI p " P~;JVn I p (~" -f' fl:NG p " P cnG<l p -·fl P IFo Cl ' ' P ~V& P , on p .. ~f P ayby p $,!Y Pt I o Cl " ' Po 10< Pe !r'I Pe E P Pt..~ DI ~~~t~ Prem pl P N GI p <>Ol>C\ p" P~"'&G p .. "' P~BGcl ' . PSEG~I N ... w '"'" "" E~(~8n1> Ne 11n •l'ld f1IO• I Mt1 nn Monday's Closi11g Prices-Complete New Y Ol'k Stock Exchange List S• et Nt l -------------s.1.. .. .. IM1.l HltJI LIW OfM (Ii .. -------, Mai·ket Declines 111 Slow Trading NEW YO RK (AP) -T1>din g ~as q1ute slow and prices ~ere dO\\ n 111 ?i.1onday s stock market as b1 okcrs and bu,crs JILke shO\\:ed uncertainty over lhe 1nternat1onal and don1est1c 1nflue ni.:es or th e \\al 1n Vi eln un Dctl1n1ng 1"sues ran \\ell ahe ad or the ga iners on lhe Ne\\ York Stock Exi.;hange At one time they had 8 1narg1n Of 1bout 3 to 1 but Ill l he afternoon the n1arg1n n;u rO\\ ed " ""' •I ·~ . ,. ' ' ' .. " " " ' " ... ,. I " ' . " . ' . •1 19~. ,, ' Utft l H[tll law CltM Cnt s " 'I s • ,. '" " • '" .. "' ' X• " I ' ' ' 1 " " .. " s ,. " " • ... '~ " ' "'' •• • ... "" " '" "' " " ... .. . N " " .. ' . " • ... " •• ' . ... • • ,., " " • • ,, " . • ~ '" •• ~' ' . " ... •• ll ' '" ' . " ,, " • '" " . " • "" ~. •• " • .. '"' • • " ' .. " ' " .. ' • c !LY PILOT I l ' ~ .. '~ 1 I 'u 'u " . ' -XY7-l 1~ \ I Jf "° ?• ' " ' • • ' ' "' ' . ' ' l? ))o XI • • ' n • .. • Complete Closing Prices-A1nerican Stock Exchange List " ~ • • i 'j li ' " " i; ,~, '~ • •• ' " . ' • ,, . " ... .. " . " . " . " . " . ' •I " ~ .. Ne1v Yori~ llps a11d Do1v11s ~W YQJ!IC fUP11 -Tiit !ftl OWl"t Ill 111~1 ltlt l!ftck1 lllBI II•~ l'Dflll Ull fllf mot! ..,.,4 d~Wll Tiie most t>,,s"S 011 ..ercent Of <fl11not 11n Ille Nl'W VDMI: 5 Ock E ~clltn~~ -~~ d e'' 11 vo umt Ne a~(! P'~« ice cllB 001 .-r-1 the d f ertrn:e bt~e,, v11le dav • clo1lng pr ce •lid IOdt'r I cJ~I no pr Ct. GAINERS " " . "' ' " " • ~l · • I ' ' . • "' • ... ' " M ' ~ ' IQ•• " '." '" • • ' 1 '" I ,,_ UP I• I Pl( PW II Ull @J ?De P&L ' lll 1 l 1'1'fG ~qr 0 tll 6 1 •fl ~llC lt.ll u11 61 'c~ !ntf 14 UD '36APLp fl $0 UJ> .5~ I C~ r Ao! UD S1 I s ..... 1~~ M Ufl S' 'US~"'I II 5 U SlQUnl'oQf"S tO l)p • S l C~<1dbu n pf Jll } 'I* 0'1f 0 VfH" UP •S lPt" lttt Cll \!fl cc •ME (op Uo •l S Wt 110\~ If UP • ' ' nR111dno Co Uo •? 1Pvebe 1ftt tn 1 Q1 •r1111\d Sd ln J• t(on (fl~l"f! un 1•,o(l~"v~ u 11 l l11 t mn '~ ~ l,ID l1j1-w nywl~ U" !111 p,vt<• C&ll Vo ll )• D 't I O-un Jl Af'Lnft 1 06 l OSEllS LI \ Nt l JI -' 0 -I s•-l• 1\ -1 '"--1'4 I 1 -ll ' ~l ~ " . " " . " _, _, _, ' . _, . ' " . " . .. ' " .. ,., "' " -·· -.. _, ->. -, -'• _,., _, i\e10 \'11rl~ Sa les Volume l t U11lltd l"J"I •~•x f'lr• 10 ~ ,., '*' ""' w ... Mcrl•Jt ... 'Y,2:Rfm.:1~:n 1S~k 0 f .~~tn;cl> $• tS(lldd H II~ Low • SJle• H'1 ''"'' I H '" Low (lfl• Cllt Sii.. Net (11411 ) HllJI Ltw CloM Cllt '"" ... , (llfl.) Hltfl Uw Cltlt <ttt ltlft: Ntl IMl I HllJI Lew Cr.11 Cllt • St111 Ht! 4Mh I Hltll LIW Clllt Cnt l ' " " .i 'M • " .. l ' ~ " •• • ' n ' " • ,! • " ,\ • • , .. " ' ·~ -u " ' s ' ' ' ' . ~. ' . • '" ' . ". ' ' . . , J'/oJl o i i; . ' ~ ;~ "• 14 • IS 11 ;1 6 • } , : . ' " • • 9 J 12 12 ... ~ • 'o,. ... . ' .. 1J~ ltt ~ I iS'l.,~ • • G'o 10 1 s 11 s 1~. ! '" l' 10 O 9 I U- ,, ' . ' 11 ~ 6 ,~ l~ ll ' ,,s I Sle 1 I l~: 11 s • I• , ' J\o J>to lll o l'• ' 71 'XI • 6 ·~· 1 1 -~J~IJ'e l 21tl 2•'4 th •• t II 10~ I ' f -" I • •\• 7l2 1o 2" 2 0 ,... 2-'to ,, 2'\ ,~ l 1!)o lt 0 ~1 I~ 1 11Ho J ltt~ 15'19 .. "'-,, . 1,J ",1i! ~? 5 !So SI 21 o ?61,,, 71 10 IQ 'e l 59 ),.,. ,. 4 S''o ll 19 ,.,. 70 .... '" ' s~ .s11 I lll'e ''h -WW- • 9 • 9 I f II 1.S I'> ,~ "°"" 1<l • l J • J \ 11 0 • 10 .s.s 1s .u , S2 l''• j' ' h J I 1 6. • ' . . ] , & • 1 IQ l Q J 710.. "' • • ,,,,~ 27 1~ ,,.,_ l .. ?l ,.. •lio n .s11 s, f:! 3• .. J?•• .j l~ l,. 1Q ,M • Jl"'i o11 1s1. 1sv. s lJ.:-? l~h 6 17 16~. "', . ,, lS 1 t 7 , 12 • • • • IQ 19 1 U ~, s1 s~ . ' ' 1 !O t.:. 1Q t ,,, .,, .. 10 6 6 • l~ 16 • S IYo O'o 1 S'\4 U V. 11 11 (I 11 U I 1 ] 3 • SI )\~ l JS I • 6] u ~ ' 11 ,.,, lS "-1 "-~1 _,,,_ l6 11 1 \I " ,. 1 • • \ 3U ~1Stt ! - ~l-• :1 -1. "" ... ''""-~ -. • '!-ll ,. 1l + ~ )j ---,, ' -• .. " Finance Briefs e Price Hike OAK!AND -Two ste p price Increases totaling up to 12 7.t percent on aluminum in- sulated wire and cable ha\:e bttn announced by Kaiser Aluminum & Chemical Corp The hrm said 1t was In- creasing prices S percen t on aluminum bu1ld1ns wire and non metallic sheathed elec· tr1cal cable and 7~'1 J)'rcent on service entrance cable prod ucts effective ritay I Kaiser nlM said prices on Aluminum i ns u I a t e d com· mochty items i;h1ppcd startlnr July l \\Ould be increased an add1t1onnl S percl'.nl The pr1re changt>s at· tr1buted to incrtii.s«I costs, were descrlbed ln a Kinser atatemtnl as wlth1n price cell· Ing llmlls sel b) !he federal Price Comm1ssloo '. ~ DAILY PILOT l'emlly C'l r•·us . Tuw!.11 :.~J~ 'J. lrii') b11 Bii K e ane Fishing Industry Menaced • t\1'.:\V YOllK I Uf'I J -~tany buslutss firms s upp o; I t.'COlugical and eit~onmental Jrnprovement grud ingly, but one industry does so with 1ncssibnlc zenl ause its survival depends on t. Ilnan.w.fum~ uron.deritd "T( water pollu ion and :ibuse of the environment kill off the fish, we're out of business," said Tom Lenk, president of Garcia Corp. of 1'caneck. N.J., the world's l ead ing n1akers and d1s1r1butors or fishing tackle. 1to ' nmmce llis competitor. Everett R. !lames, vice-president of Shakespea re Co. of "M omm y, were the ghosts you ond Daddy were watching on TV real or not? 11 Kalamazoo, J\1ich., agrees. Jla1nes , \Vho is president of the American· Fishing T a c k le 1t1anufaclurers Association de- votes all his t i m e at Shakespeare to ecological and cnvironn1ental problen1s. Not long ago, Shakespeare set an ('Xamplc for other industries in the Kalamazoo region by cleaning up an effluent prob- lem at it s O\l'n plant. Merc11ry Mini11g Tolvn Will Clo se Lenk and ~lames said all taCklc makers are acutely conscious of lhe need for im-.._ _ proved ecology just as they ~ became conscious years ago of : SJ. the need for fish conservation · IDR IA, Cali L jAP ) :_This mining tcno:n shuts dO\VO al the end of school this year. its 120- year history ending in the ton- cern over ecology and pollu- tion. ldria is a company town, ex- isting solely because its cirr nabar mines ha ve been ror some time the biggest source of quicksil ver in the Western ll~misphere. Doom was soundc<l recently \\'hen the New Jdria ~ti ning and Chemical Co. informed its stockholders it "'as losi ng money and hailed produc!lon. The price of n1crcury is about one-third of its form er price, with demand down to hall since IS69, and the com- pany told its stockholders that for the past nine months it has lost $100 on each 76-p.:iund flask of mercury it produced. In a ren1ote corner of San Benito Counl y. 80 miles \\'l'St of Fresno and HiO miles southeast 1)f S.111 Fra11cisco. ldria neve r h:i s bet n a metropolis. Jn 1969 it had 151, f:1m.lies. and another 50 fa milies Jived Lock11ecd Will Btrild 'Oil Mop' SUNNYVALl..E . Calif. (AP l -An oil gobbling n1eehanical mop to clean up high seas oil spills will be built by Lockheed Missiles and Space Co. for lhc U.S. Coast ..yuard, the firm says. Lockheed said the prototype system \.\•ill wipe up 200 10 1.200 gallons of oi l a minute. depending on sea conditions and the th ickness of the spill . Designers say the 12.500 paund cleaner can be deployed to the si te or a spill by vessels as small as the Coast Guard's 95--foot cutters. The device will be moored within a boon1 system and oi l will be scooped up by the ski111 n1er :incl pun1ped to large rial in~ rubber bags. The full bags "'ill be lowed to the nC':tres t port. Lockheed said. The systen1 is to ht· buill un- der a $705 .i!lO con I r a c t , Lockheed said. al Ne"' Almaden in Santa Clara County where the com- pany operated another inine until recently. Some 31 families are still here. waiting for their chi ld ren to finish the school year .. "I guess I'll have to start over again." says John Castro, "'hose father was a miner here before him and who plans to move to a trailer he O\vns in J-Jolfister. He has been laid off before P ollu.tion during low mercury price periods. but the mine always sta rted up again. The market began an all- t ime skid in 1969 when star- tling mercury levels \vere found in fish and in sediment from industrial plants using 1ncrcury. ri10<lcrn techniques had ex- panded the use of mercury dramatic<illy into pa i n I s , pesticides. fungicides a n d other materia ls. \Vhen word of n1ercury pollution s pread , manufacturers were qu ick to find alternate and less con- troversial chemicals t ha n mercury. ''It's terrible to leave. because all my years are· here." s.::ivs !\.trs. Rosa Garcia, \vife of a ·miner. "My children were burn here, and J ha ve fJ1nily buried here.'' "I never read much abo ut it mercury pollution and I don't know whether they are right or \l'l'ong," said Albert Vera, 56. and 40 years in the mines. Jle's looking for a ne1v job. Operations manager Ben Balley contends the mercury 1xitlution scare 1vas due to alarn1ist talk and that no one rea lly kn o1\·s ho1I' n1ercury gets into living ti ssues nor ho\v 1nurh mercury it takes to paison a person. \Vhat puzzles Vera and some others is that despite handling lhe red ore constantly they have suffered no ill errects. John Cnstro has spent four years as a firernan tending the smelting: furnaces. says he's never been ill and th inks ;1nvone \\'ho becon1es i 11 arOund ti plant li ke this is c:areless about fumes. rilcxican p r o s p e rt o r s discovered the deposits or cri111son cinnabar here, which the Indians used as a source of their body paints. The mine hns been \\"Orked most of the lin1e since 18.'i4. 11erbert 1 foover once "·as a major stockholder. and more raising of trout and bass 1n s:ate and privately o"·ned ilatcherics. "Sor11e little manufacturers in the busi ness devote an enormous amou~t of their personal lime lo lhe cause," bik . hJ t said Hames. J{e also said the e S r S Sporlfishing Institute and the faaak Walton League raise by kennfndtOn money constantly to support e campaigns for ecologica l and . . · -I environmental improvement. W ide-tracked s~r1pes 1n racing co o rs Garcia not only publishes circle our gang of lo ng ond short material on ccotog ic~I prob-. · h bl lrms tind conservation but sleeved shirts. They re wos a e. has acti ve programs or its They've got p ockets ~-fure and of t . O\vn. It recently launched a , · I nationwide fish restocking pro-They re great for you o nd your g 1r. gram. \Vilh every purchase of 6 00-1 O 00. a Garcia fishing reel the com-· ' pany buys two hatchery fish and arranges to have them stocked in the \~·a1ers of the buyer's choice. Considering l~at Garcia is the country's biggest seller of reels that can add a lot of fi sh 10 the nation's strc:ims and lakes. Garcia ci lso interested Ralph Nader in a program to organize l he nation's 60 million fresh and salt water anglers in a campaign to clean up the waters. Garcia pro- vided Nader with seed money for the campaign. Garcia established a station at its Teaneck plant for the coll cc!ion of recyclnble waste materials. The more materia l recycled. the Jess chance there "·ill be to find effluents that pollute streams. Garcia also gave up its sales-oriented exhibit at the industry's biggest an nu a I s hOI\', that or the Tackle ManufacWrcrs Association big Whee) and subst1tu1ed an ecolog1cal ~-------... --........... ) .. ~ action display. J b A m ® A fis herman himself, Lenk eaDS Y • says he has contributed a lot ~ or personal time to con-Pegger® bush ieans for all t he neigh-~~~~~~i~~aju~! ;~~t~etos~~:~~ borhood pedalers .•. guys and gals more fish. More than 1.0 years alike. soft crushed denim fla re s of c ot - ago he \Vas instrumental in 'd b It. I k t helping to get Congress to ap-ton, w1 e e oops, cargo po c e s. propri ate money fo r the first I 0.00. national marine research pro-Th p t Sh gram on behalf of sports e an op fis hermen. Pollution Standards U11changed WASHINGTON (UPI) - Contrary to a . UP I dispatch, the Environmental Protection Agency is leaning towa rd tough regulations to prevent \.\·arcr pollution caused by discharge of human wastes fron1 boats. Arnong: those lea\'ing 11 ill be Christopher and Sa n d r a Lnngley, husband-a n d-1vife teachini; iea1n v.·ho run the fl ight grades or !he primary sC'hool. 'They're down to 21 pu pils no1'" "\\\1 \\'ill be sad to leave," snys J\fr s. Langley. •·This hns brcn a good life ainong strong people "·ho are no helter or "·orse t hiln othCr places. but I lhink stronger. kindlier and mnrc fr'icodly." A UPI .story Tuesday quoted EPA sources as saying the standards proposed a year ago had been s u b s t a nt ia ll y "·eakened. Some or the retnaining residt'nts plan to nlv\"e to Bakersfield or f'rcsno. None expects to find a place \\'here they and their C'hildren ran roam so freely. But higher ranking officials of lhc agency has told UPI to- dny lhe report \\'as erroneous. 'The standards hRve not been rini.sht"d, these sources said, but are likely to require treat- ment of wastes equivalent to the secondary treatm e nt recommended for municipal se\\'age plants. HAMS .. , • the helt elreult . ' ' hyheehelll Going orou nd with the best ie•ns in t own ••. our new colleetiOri ~f lea thers, tapestries ••• oil bu died boldly. 6.00.10.00. University Shop - . ' / , ,..,-. I I I i (, I ,'·~ I .. .. ' -1 Haunt You 'Til It's Gone" . So Good It WID it!'Js at the 1¢'1atJway ' I-' " >il I " lttAIL STOlH J100 L C•ost Hi.-.,, C9NH .. M• -67l·f000 1122 S. l~hllf'lf, AHHI• 6Jf-J4'1 ' CElllfOS, 1 ORANGE, MALL OF ORANGE,, ,IQD I.et C..-rlt•t M•lf J)OO No. T1utin Str••I !ti' 121 11 160•0-4 11 j11 41 ••t-1 1,11 SUNDAY""IJ NOON-to .5-1".l-'. ANAHEIM NEWPORT HUNTINSTON IEACH 4-4-4 N. Euclld 47 hthl•A l•I•'"' 1111 U i11,.r A ... 111•• 1714) !ill·ll JI 17141 644-1 212 "' .C714J ltJ.JlJ t • SHO, 10 A.M , t. •»O ,,M. MONDA~ THROU&M FRIDAY. IAlURDAY 10 AIM. "I• r ,,M. "' . ~·· 1 a a s s a a 1 e m DEAR letter fro trouble seems she to have m)'>elf do Brian when he down a f demands around an were ha thanked plaint wa much atte Many ni movie or to study. ect ,. a good wife cleaning being I fr demands My typi made so lime to things wr cept it JUNE. DEAR t are of ltl&er t '!'bub DEAR teenagers fr<!lll>le. U PY ~Y ' h!.ve.,:a Actbally but they · we art at so knowl It out. The girl They are ,.sponslbl mouU.y a They bave \ Brooks Co lection- ' By MARJAN CllRJSTY NEW YORK -Fashion designer Donald Brooks sat in his busy workroom on Seventh Avenue recenUy and admitted to fedinc de- p~ed. What is making Donald feel down II Ibo sp~il ol the dnss-alike, blue-Jeon l)'Ddromo which appears lo be rubbing oil m lubioo- ables who once flipped ror couture. "The wife of the chainnan or the board and some little typist Jn the secretarial pool are dressed in similar shirts and skirts," says Brook about the breaking down of fuhlon barriers. "That boils down to 1 uniform. Jt'a anti-fashion and pro-socialism.•• Another thing bothers Donald. 11te force of fashion has decreased, he uyr, since President John F. Kennedy wu •• saS!lnated. American women went into 1 non. stop mourning period and have been dresainl somberly for too many seasons. "Either by intent or accident women .have been wearing gloomy clothes that are greyed or muddied ln color and deliberately unglam- orous," says Brooks. "Fash!~ is a pep pill and It's about time elegantea took measures ·1o boost their psyches with a:citing clolhea." Brooks, like other Amerlt111 . clellgnen, hu had a slower-than-ever season and b: ofterinl women ''happy" clothes for 'fall-winter, 1m. In the hopes of rtinte.resting women tn faib- lon. i'DI color spectrum is straight out of a pri- ltnll)' paint box. He's pushing winter white as a ligbt-bri~­ substitute for the inevitable dirks -parUcu- Jarly black. SilhouUes are easy to wear. Hemlines are at the knee. Best of all, there'• a crosHeCtion of war- able look.s from which to choose. ''My new rollection is a depression fighter," aays Dl;ln· aid with a smile. "I want women to feel bet. ter for having worn these clothes." For example, be shows grey fianne1 t10!.JI. ers with 1 red-yellow plaid topper and 1 chartreuse sweater over 1 crtam shirt. He says it's an exciting look that can ltl 1 woman through a atonny winter, But It's defmltely decollelage at nl(ilt: "When It comes lo a pniper •vmlni ~ an elegante wouldnt dare tum up In pants,' says Donald who may not know bow· ...,_ pendent women are. 0 Tbat'a when panta b. come tough, common and cheap." This may be: a fashion point with which many women will dilfer. Wife Unlocks Success Secret --~ ~ • ' , .. ... / - EAR ANN LANDERS: I just rud the ter from the girl who is 24 and having uble Yl'ith her second marriage. It ms she can't control her mouth. I used have that problem, until one day I sat self down and did some tall thinking. rian decided to go back to IChool he got out of the aervice. Holdin& wn a lull·Ume job 1nd goinc to llChool mands a lot of energy. When I looked und and saw the problems our fr~ rt having with their marriages I nked God for this man. My only com- int was that he wasn't able to pay u ch attention to me as I wanted. n know where they art at all tirna. At Jeut we think we·do. any nights I wished we couJd go to a vie or just talk, but I knew Brian had study. I'd get busy with a small pr1>J- ao as ·not to pester him. Being a wife means more than cooking and anlng and laundry and HI. It means Ing a friend. And sometimes friendship mands that you leave people alone. y typing isn't great and I see I've de some mistakes but If I take the e to write this over I'll find too many ngs wrong and tear It up. So please IC· t ·it the way it is. Thanks, Ann. - NE. EAR JUNE: Tbe typesehen will tab ol tbe mistakes. It'• die ttate •f • tat eouta •ad )'OWi lw It. ult for wrlUn1. EAR ANN LANDERS: We havt two agers who have never given us 1ny ~le. Until now. Perhaps ft Isn't fair to JlleY 'art giving us tn>ublo but the)' ~-us ...... sleopi<ol nlllhta. clually they haven't done anylhlnc. they tallt so much about drup that are al 1 Joss to know how they c1n be koowledgeable unless they have tried ul girl Is IS, the boy Is ne1rly 17. y are &ood students, rtsptetful ind slble. althotlgh the rJrJ ii a bit lby and the boy Is a llllle •loppy. y have 10me odd·IOOldn& frieodl but Hett are 10me ol the llalm1enll our cblldren have made and n would like lo -if they art true: Marijuana ii hannlt1s. No one has proved olhen>i>e. 'Ille world would be a better place if all alcohol wu dumped Jnlo the ocean and pot wu Uled lnalead. ll's·a lie that LSD ll!lrl have deformed babies.· No ..,.. hai ever proved lhll atatement. A mtain percentage of babies are datintd lo be born d<lecllve, regardJes1. Pllll can be a J11Q1 '1dP lo pOople who meed a temporuy spurt of energy. They are very helpful in CAii of emergency. Only the idiots att hooked. If a penon knowa bow lo -pllil be """'! r•t Into troul!Je. 'Ille media bu ......... led the drug P<Oblem. MID has alwaya 'Jeoned on IOmelhing artificial lo help him lhrwgh perioda of llrtss and atrlin, .....,... and fatipe, and tvtn bortdom. · Can you l<1I 111, AM, which of ~ ltalements art true and wbicb are falle? Today the kids teem to know more lhlJI the aclulll. We'd like lo .. lhil letler In the column. Thank you. ..,. CHAPEL HILL IGNORAMUSES DSAll a!AP: 'l1lt -• to .. ...... ,.. ......... , ....... .................. .,. __ ...... "llralPI Dope • llnp." nil It a •r tllR .... Itta• I w• a -,..,.. ..... tMt -...... Mc.--Mllar,plotaloq-~ ....... tffilife. WI .. f -..... el staa,. .. AM Lui••, lo1 SMt, Oilcoit. Ill. - \ Do nald Brooks' fall trend reveals the chemise with hemline at t he knee. His tent c oats a re in lightweight fabrics. \ ~men BEA ANDERSON, Editor ''" 11 Fabrics Weave Roman~·ic Tales By JO OLSON Of the Daily Pilot Stafr Fascinating. romantic tales have been told about fabrics since man f i r s t wrapped skins about himself for warmth in the 1ce j.ge. Relating some ol these for the f\.1esa· Harbor Club during a meeting in the Irvine Coast Country Club was Mrs. Thelma Speed Houston of Vista, a fonner textile designer for several New York firms. A graduate of Pratt Institute School of Fine and Applied Art, New York, she was a designer ~or A. Sulka and Co. of Paris and New York, and a designer and colorist for the SL Andrew's Textile Co. in New York. Mrs. Houston illustrated her lecture with colorful samples of desig ns, water. colors and rich wool plaids from Scot- land's most prominent mills. In the Neolithic Age, she said, women did the weaving, but "being women they must have gotten tired of the same old grey." They noticed that the berries they picked on the banks of the rivers left stains on their fingers , so they used these berries to make the first dyes. PICTORIAL HISTORY Egyptians spelled oul the history of their fabrics with pictures on tomb walls, she sq "Today, in certain parta of the world, nax is harvested the same way Stories of intrigue, romance and fascination ere woven around fabrics, It was in ancient Egypt." Cotton ca me to the western world by way of India , and the t.1oors taught the Spaniards how to plant cotton and weave It. "Silk has a fascinating history which involves romance, intrigue and a kid· napping," 1he revealed, "Forty.five hundred year1 ago a Chinese empress decided to try weaving a cloth from silk. It was so shinunering she had a robe made for her emperor." Soon, the interest in silk spread throughout the land and villagers were taught to weave the precious fabrlc. "The Chinese realized_ that if they could keep the secret of s~k-making within their borders, they Cflld k e e p pros- perity ,'' Mrs. Houston said. "They kept the secret for 2,000 years." About this time, the Japanese kid· napped some Chinese maidens and forced them to reveal the secret of silk. NO SILK "Silk got to India by way of a Chinese girl who was betrothed lo an Indian prince. "When you buy 1 dress or fabric. do you ever look at the print and ask, ·~ djd it come about?'' A1n. Houston ubd.. She said the majority of te1tlle design- ing is done 1n the basement of the P.fetropolltari Musewn of Art ln New York, not "on locatk>n" in foreign coun- tries as many people would imagine. For txample, one print might be in- spired by the back or a Chinese Chip- pendale chair and another by an ancient um. She uplalntd that deslgnel'1 111..nr see 1 fabric without color or deslgn. ..,These fabrics are called "grey aood.•." '" D.?slgns come and go, Mrs. Housloe sald, but tome, such as paisleys, go OG forever. The artist nld that U she were lo apeat of labrks chfonoJqiically, Iba 1toty of wool should come first. "It ls a joy lo work with a fabric lhal Is born, not made.'' .- • . • • • • . . ' .. .. • • r / I j • • 1 " I • ' ' Bouncing Habit Unchecked ' • • l By ERMA BO~ffiECK It ls hard to belleve that my checkbook could bt more im- aginative than Jt already Is. (lity husband calls it the greatest piece of fiction since Alice In Wonderland). But it seems in California, there is t new trend not only to have checks in color, but to personalize them with pictures of the house, the kids or the pets. One of the more daring users had a special check printed to be used for hls alimony payrilents ... a pie· ture ol him kissing his new wife . I thought the idea was sorta kicky and told my husband so. "What picture do you think V.'e could use?" I asked, shuffling through some old snaps I Your Horoscope AT WIT'S END found in the desk drawer. ''How about you v.·ith a pen In each hand and a caption un· dernea th re ading, 'llO\VARD HUGHES LIVES!' " •iokay, let's have it. You're still sore about the check I wrote to the bank to C'Qver the overdraft." He sighed. "I am no t sore about the check you v.·rote to the bank to cover t h e overdraft. I am sore because you forgot to record it." "Does that mean you want no part in helping me pick out a picture tor our checks?" "How about the family pie· ture v.·e used on our Christmas cards?" he asked. "You're not seriow," 1 said, holding the picture uoder a light. "Are these the faces that you want to pa ss through the hands of strangers? The kids look surly, I look fat , and you look like you couldn 't be trusted to deposi t y o u r ~1other's Social S e c u r i t y check." "Then. how about a pic ture of our house? The bank would like that since, they O\Vn 1/10 of it anyway.'' "There you go again. Admit ii. You're sore about the check I y,•rote when I bad lunch with Cancer: Old Teacher Makes· Reappearance WEDNESDAY, MAY 10 By SYDNEY OMARR to hold 11•ater. You gain now SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): by getting lo heart or matters. You get what you need TAURUS (April 21J-May 20): through unusual so urce . You are going to be finished Relative, close ne ighbor could with burden you should not be involved. Don't attempt to r the girls last week... , "The check for the lunch di~ not bother me," he aal~ evenly, ''The check you wrote outside in the sum of I penny and threw into a fountain foi' good luck bothered me.'' "I knew you'd say I write too many checks and I forgot to record them and I am sorry about it. But maybe if I had • distinctive. personalized check I \l!'o uld stop and think before I wro te it." "1-loy,• about having them edgl'<I in black v.·ith a picture F, Lee Bailey In the center?'' 1 don 't know about you, but t can't even talk to my husband about the checkbook anymore. Ever since the 35-cent check to the tooth fairy bounced. ~ ~ .. A Regal Command Performance Readied The typical Aries voter Is seeking something new. To ap.- peal to Aries, a candidate will have to concentrate o n original concepts, daring pro. posals. The candidate who wins the vote of Aries will be basically independent, ag. gressive and steadfast. have carried in first place. force issues. Be 'receptive. Sense of relief is due. Learn to There is plenty of contusion. -S'ay-no. Refuse to become in-Thi s will work to your ad· volved with one who C'Qn-vantage. stantl y sings blues. SAGITTARI US (Nov. 22-MARILYN CODY Queen's Command Performan ce is th e theme se· ~ . lectcd by the Lad ies Gu ild of Sts. Simon and Jud e Parish for the annual fashion sho\v and luncheon. to take place at 11 :30,a.m. Saturday, May 13, aboard the Queen Mary. Ready for the regal event are l\irs. Peter Zito (left) Jeff Borowiec and l\1rs. Robert llaizlip. ARIES (~1arch 21-April 19): Be self-reliant. P r om i s es made by others are not likely GEMINI (1'.1ay 21-June 20 ): Dec. 21 ): Unorthodox ap- Friends argu e and try to in· proach spells profit. Your voh·e · You. Utilize cominon crealil'e ability shines. Check sense. Tr you take sides no\v limes for appointment s. June Dote Selected r Club Gavels Passed Into New Hands you \~1ill be in position to Synchronize move s. Pisces ult imately lose. Key is to re· person has information which main aloof without appearing can open doors ·previously indifferent. Not easy, but closed. ne cessary. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. CANCER (June 21-July 22 ): 19): Element of tim ing is on What appears a setba ck is your side. Study Sagittarius merely a test. Trust inner message. You are designated feelings. Shake-up is due in to handle unique assignment. basic position. This \viii have Let others know that you can beneficial effect. You will be be flexible. It is not necessary out of rut. One who taught yo u to take back seat. St. Jaines Episcopal Church, Newpl}ft Beach will be the set- ting for the June 17 rites link· ing Marilyn Ann Cody and Arthur George Trujillo, both of Ne\\'port Beach. Coastal area clut:is continue to change leadershi p as the ~ beginning of a new organiza- : tional year approac hes. • With the hel p of a $6 .000 •. grant. a ma jur retros pective exhibition is being planned for the Newport H~rbor Art 1'.1useum and som e children will discover ne1v sounds dur- ing a special trip to the zoo. Exh ibitio n The Newport llarhor Art Museum has announced that it has recei ved a $&.000 grant from !he National Endo\\'ment on the Arts to help fund a n1a- jor l~eginat Marsh retrospec- tive exhibi tion. Thomas H. Garver. director. has been organizing the ex· hibition, which will open !his fall and consist of about 30 paintings spannirig the period from 1930 until h1arsh's death in 19~. for about a yea r. World Wings The Los Angeles Chapter of organization of former Pan Am erican World A i r wa ys stc1va rdesses. will meet for its annual s pr i n g fund -raising part y Salurda.v, J\·lay 13, in Los Angeles. Proceeds y,•ill apply to a San Fernando Valley State College scholarship for the sons and daughters of deaf parents \\'ho might hecon1e interpreters for deaf students enrolled there. HEAR During Ma y . nat ionally desi gna ted as Beller Hearing A1onlh. children from the lfEATt Foundation of Orange County will visit lhe Prentice f'ark Zoo, Santa Ana. These children are noy,· able lo hear the sounds around them, an abundance of which will be heard at th e zoo. Philharmoni c Mrs. Richard ll. Lee "'ill be installed as president of the \Vomen's Commitl tts of !he Orange Counly Ph ilharmonic For Press Chairmen Workshop Set 1'he DAILY PILOT \Vill conduct a series of \\'orkshops for press C'hai rn1 en of Orange Coast \VOmen 's organizations. Presidcnls are also 1ve lco1ne. 'r \1·0 \vorkshops 1vill be conducted each afternoon during the \Veek of l\1ay 22-26. r~ach \\•ill be limited to 40 persons and r~se rval ioni; \vi l! be taken on a firsl·con1e, first-served bas is. . ?'he sessions. scheduled al 1 and 3 p.m., \\'tll include a tour of the ne1vspaper plant an d a <1 u~s l ion and answer period, eondu cted by Bea Anderson , 1voma n's editor. 1'o 111ake reservations. ca ll the DAILY PILOT at 642-4321 and ask for the 1vo men's department . Couple Recite Vows The llC"v, \\' ;: ficiatcd \1hen ' It S1nith ot- 111~ n i c e t', Tallulah \V r a y Bullington m a r r i e d f'rank Polts \Villian1so n Ill in \Vasl1ingto11 Street Churc h of Chr ist. ; ' • • = t . MRS, WIL LIAMSON - I • The bride , daughte r of Dr. and 1'.1rs. Thornas Bullington of F:1yelleville, Tenn., 1vas at- tended by 1'.1rs. John Richardson. matron or honor, and lhc li.iisses Belly Bull· ln,i:lon, Dina h Oedcn. Leslie Bolner and Jean fl oo d , bridcsrnaids. ~1r. and :'\tr~. John B. WllUamson of Corona del J\iar are parents of the bridegroom \\'ho asked hls father to be best .man. Ushers were Larry Walker. T om Bolner, Tom Bullington and Richa rd son. The new 1'.frs. 'Vil!iamson graduated from Central J-llgh School in fo~aytllev llle. }!er husband attended Corona del "f!lr lfig~ School and Orange Col.4st College. They 1'1ill rtside in Newport Beacb. Society during a luncheon at II a.m. Wednesday. May 10, in the Bahia Corinthian Yacht Clut:i. O!her new officers are the l\1n1es. 1\-1. Lyell Evans, vice chair1nan ; lllichael Brick. treasurer: Da vid Robertson and David Tingler . secretaries, and J . Donald Ferguson. parl iamentary ad- viser. Thurs. Club Ne\v officers for the Thurs- day 1'.1orning Club \Vi ii be in- stalled during a brunch at 11:30 a.m. Thursday, l\1ay 11, in the Balboa Bay Club. They are the ~fn1es. John r..·Io rris. president : J a m e s Stan1per, \Villiam h1cF'arland, Robert Ande 'r son and J . 0 ·11:ira Sm i t h. v ice presidents: John \Vright J . \\'escott Loos, f\.1ario Pacini and William BI o c her . secretaries, and John Carson, treasurer. Jr. Women J\lrs. \Villiam Griffin, ,..lrs. Dan Gordon and Mrs. Cliff Brightman \\'ere honored for their activities by the South Coast Junior \VOman's Club recently. 1\1rs. Griffin wa s named Citizen-of-the-yea r. In addition to ser11ice on club co mmittees, she is involved with Indian r..1aidens. Nieblas PTO and Plavan School for Orthopedi· cally llandicapped Children. l\Jrs. Gordon was named tlub\1•oman -of • the • year. Recently elected president or the club, she has chaired several club committees, serv· ed as an officer and worked on all club projects. Jl..lrs. Brightman was cited [IS Girl-of-lhi-year. She will continue in her role as club treasurer and has also taken the lead in many club ac til'ities. Alumnae New officers for t h e Stephens College A I um nae Association will be installed during a luncheon al 11 :30 a.m. Saturday, ?.-fay 13. in the Airporter fnn. New officers are the ?.-1mes. \Vynn Chapman. president : Donald Snyder, secretary; Stanley Pincura, treasurer. and Da1•id Rimer, vice presi- dent. Artist Talks Never Underestimate the Po~·er of a Woman ... To Steal the Show will be the theme of a talk by Flavia, California artist. before the Coast Alumnae of Alpha Chi Omega during a luncheon at 11 :30 a.m. Saturday, ~1ay 13. in the Irvine Coast Country Chtb. in past will make reap-AQUA RIUS (J 20 F b an. -e . pearance. 18): Decision Is made behind LEO (July 23-Aug. 22 ): sce ie d you a 1 s -an re Social activity increases. \'ou be n e f i c i a r y . ri.t ea n s go places. meet people and circumstances now favor your fee l gratified . \Von de r f u 1 efforts and aspirations. Be change of pa ce occurs. You confident. Finish what you ma v arrive at destination not start. One you respect seeks oriC-inally scheduled . Take it in your opinion. stride. PISCES (Feb. 1S.~1arch 20): The future bride ts the daughter of Theron Staples Cody of Co1npton and the late A1rs. Cody. and her fiance Is the son of ~fr. and ~trs. Ben ito Trujillo Jr. of Lancaster. 1'.liss Cody is a graduate of Dominguez High School and California State College at Fullerton and leaches at Cox Elementary School, Fountain Valley Trujillo. a graduate Clf Lakewood High School, at· tends Orange Coast College. VffiGO (Aug. 2.3-Sept. 22): Cooperate with Sagtttarlan. If Preventil•e measure now Can you provide data, you will be save you ti me · em· repaid. Discussion of finances barrassment. Protect your im-is on agenda . Take initiative. age. Be aware of dut ies. re-Realize you have somethin~ of i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; quir,emenls and restrictions. value to offer. Generous offer Se ''TOUTES LES CHOSll,. LIBRA ( pt. 23-0ct. 22): will be received. ''The Everyth ing" Refuse to be rushed . ~fate, IF' TODAY IS yo UR RUMMAGE SALE partner may be out of sorts. BIRTHDA Y d . Frr., M•v 1,, s11., M•v ~ ,., I II r h. h you are ynamic. You .obtain acts. a o v.· 1c . 1 h' St. J•rne1 Epl1cop•I may not be pleasant. Key is to stubborn, an orig1na t inker. Church e\·aluate. Be a n a I y I i c a I . 110t v11 Lldco, Ntwport Understand legal implications. Ir,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;~ Ask question s and obtainli ans\vers. Yoga: Spirit Joining Matter · Indra Devi macle a flying trip from Chicago to Corona del h1 ar to address the \Vomen's Auxiliary to the Orange Co unty 1'.·I e d I ca I J\ssocia lion on th e topi c Femininity Through ~tind and Body Control. However, she had forgotten her assigned topic and asked ) \ the auxiliary president what it \.\'aS. \Vhen she wa s told the title, ~1rs. Devi quickly added , "which means yoga.'' The Russian-l:>orn woinan \\'ho adopted India as the land of her dreams gave a brief history of yoga and told the doctors' wives how they could ADVOCATES YOGA Indra Devi profit from its study. In India yoga is termed a science, she said,. and its origins thousands of years ago have been obscured by time. "It is a joining of spirit and matter," she explained. "The end goal of yoga is a merging \\.'ith ultimate reality.'' Yoga is not a re ligion, she stressed, but a aystem of spiritual, physical and mental discipline. Halha yoga, the best known in the western worl d, has seven stages, Mrs. Devi said. The first dealJ with yoga postures which are not ex· ercises, she emphasized. "The ability to k e ep postures is the difference between beginning and ad· vanced students." Why yoga? Mrs. Devi said yoga offers a person the possibility or keeping himself youthful, in good health and rela1ed at every moment in life. "Pos tures, combined with deep rhythmic breathing, whip away premature wrinkles and give you a great sense of joy, no matter wha t happens, she said. The auxiliary members tried '·Hear the creaks?" she asked as necks popped all around the room. The 73-year-old devotee told the women that if they faithfully did head rolls the creaks would go awa y in a few \veeks. "The only thing is to make a Iittle piece of paper to remind yourself to turn your head," she laughed. Accompanying her y,•as a yoga studen t, a lawyer, who demonstrated a full lotus posi- tion and a head stand . "That's a lawyer doing it - how about ·doctors?" she asked. Mrs. Devi has -inslrucled many prominent people during her years o.f teaching in Hollywood and New York, and has been guest lecturer at the Elizabeth Arden farms and the Golden Door in Escond ido. She is the author or three books on yoga and now is president of the Sai Foun- dation in Holly\l'ood which ad- mlni.sters a retreat for young people on the American side of the Mexican-American border in Tecate. a few exercises under her in·J;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; struction. Necks relaxed, they dropped their heads and Jet them roll around while keep- ing shoulders straight. , Whhi"'tl •II ••r r11feflte" eM frl•rich • h•ppy Meth•r't D•v• r •• , ,,..,. •• ,, •• ,. ••• 1,.111 •• N rtltlf bttllncl 11tre. • LOVE IS ••• A SPRING WARDROBE FOR MOTHER WDTCLIFf PLAZA NlWPOlfD INN IN LARGE & HALF SIZES SIZES 36 to 46 On·the.go Moms love sportswea.r. Choo .. her gift from lotsa tops ••• plenty of pants at Ella Nor's. We'll help you with sizes and colors. Tops from $12.00. Pants from $9.00. ,/1'1\ ' \ Free Gift Wrap Of Courstl .--Other Gift S11ggestlo11s- • PANT SUITS e Dl lSSIS e IOIU e ILOUSIS e SLIPS e SWIATllS e GOWNS U•d •clded 7 l.t Mon11 c••OM Mr owe _. .. • 1lft cettffluM. Effa Nor1sHALF·SIZE SHOP' COSTA MESA 1105 NIWPO l T llYD. f Y1 l lock North of I Ith Str••f} HUNTINGTON CENTER #14 OUnlDI MALL IN•xt to l1tlt•r lro1.> Banknmerlcnrd-• /tlastercharge I I I I l I i I I I j I ' I I Pl fl "" 10 Ri , .. JSR 16 Is • 11V ltT " 21 s 21 Pr 2lCI .. ' 2S HI '" ~Ii Sll 27 H " Jl P Jl c 34 DI '" I 40 Arr I" to 4Z Gr! 44 Ind 'spi •Int ·~· •Wit 47, p ,, '" I t11i Sd B I I I I I. DICK TRACY TUMBLEWEEDS NI~ 5..USAGI! ~ANDWICH WITM GARLIC. By Chestw I Gould NO. I TMINICITRl"'IJNDS . MER oi:: 50Mf7\llNC ~E l.IO.TES WQBS!! "\'MAN GARLIC. ·, • By Tom K. Ryan -' GASOLINE AWY NO,VOU MAY NOT WEAR A F~ATHfR !. .. YOU'VE l70NE NOTlllNGTO Pese~ve ONE! NOW~! °1tXJ LOOK SORIA SA~ LOTSA UXK SALLY BANANAS "AlQ~~ ()~ ... Mun AND JEFF FIGMENTS NANCY HELP! NANCY, . J'M CAUGHT! _,.., WHO WANTS SMART St-\OULDERS'? I'LL "TRY IT ON MYl1EAO! 611£AT •• !l<CE?f, LIKE )If( NEW CA~, IT STIU.. HAS A FEW llll65 IN IT! BALL PARK \ :zt/1tt By Al Smith By Dale Hale· SO l!W'S 11\lERE SHE 60r 'EM! GORDO MOON MULLINS ·. ANIMAL CRACKERS I I .............. _._.._....u_ ..... ..__.-J i.:;..::...:....=~-1 ,..,.::..,·,,,~ ... ~,...:!=-=· .,-., • ._.=-='-..i..::=== ACROSS 1 Plt.W!1bl119 fixlLrts & Sllor part 10 Rivff blnitts 14 Wad ing bi1d l!i Rrvtrbrratr 16 Issue with authority 17 Vouchts for 19 The dishts availablt 21'.1 Spanish tltlt 21 Prf'dtltrmined 2l Clips with · ~short strokts 2S High-: Mti! in BrllalA 26 Strlvt 21 Hat 29 Sh«t slttp 31. P!rfomitd Jl Cuc.too }1 Dlmnrss lb Rtsidt 'temPQl'arily <10 A.rrangt , according ta Silt 4t Grind ing looth <14 lndomilablt 1spirit: 1 lnfar mal 45. Wark doo9h 1 wllh hands 47, Piii in dlf· ft1tnl p1act 49 Dock workers' •ooion: Abbr. 50. Buy I I.. S2 Calllomla roe Wish 5l GnlW 54 lncOlllf t3Jt adv brr: Abbr. 57 Hrsitallon syU1bl1s .59 Bled forlh In flowtfS again bl Final st1trmmts in dip!om1tic oe110U11ions 6~ Palmrr or 81ldlng, r .g. 67 Covtting lh<11l obscurrs LS Musical inslrumtrtt 70 Ad/·,cuvr SU fir 71 Piano, drum and SIX, e.g. 72 Pt ant disrast 7) Smarr drops of moisture 74 Rmdrr succtssfully 75 Corstlrt part DOWN I Asks for aim~ 2 Fevtr l Brcome •ncrwn <I Wading bird 5 Looking with boldrlfSS b Obstac!r 7 ""' I Artic1t or ~di 'J kind :1 salad 10 Lrssrr: Prtfll 11 Ending us rd with lint lfld ~' 12 Followrr of John L. Lewis 13 Altrn\ivt scrutiny 18 Jrlly ustd in bomb• 22 Bottom 11o1rt 24 Tract of an 111imal 27 Cont1intr for liquids '""" 30 Sh0tmilkrr 32 Artlmal JS Elrctl'o· maollrlic radiation drvicr 31 Ctrtain pro- crssrd fruits: Z words 38-monsttt 39 Statr: French <11 Chlliten's pnr "l Fall to follow sul t <lb Judgt "a Low stool without back 51 Exp;insrs S~ Roman god SS Public siiu~rt 56 All0tMY - --: 2 words 58 Aetail rslablislmtnl 60 Eirtr•111t bl Troubles 63 W. lndits shrub 65 Ur. Slaughter 66 Cost 11tr unit PEANUTS JUDGE PARKER MISS PEACH IF I 60 HOME, (LL HAV'E 10 6fl A J05 •• By Harold Le Doux WELL. COU NSELOR! 1~1HEY M1'DE ONE I DIDN'T KNOW YOU MISTAKE AT BETTER, I 'D CALL YOU THE H05PITAL, AN AMBU LANCE CHASER! CHARLEY! THEY DIDN'T DRILL ENOUGH HOLES IN YOUR HEAD! By MeU 69Mountainpass r------r--------------.:---..,,.-----------~ WMEN l AM A OOC.TOR, l AM GorNG-YOU R DEDICATION IS 90UNP TO ATTli'ACT THE ADMIRATION OF MANKIND IN Ge'.NE.RA L.1 ~INGLE G-IRLS, THEIR'. MOfHE~S AND AGENB OF T><i tNTERNAt.'. !<:~VENUE SERVJCE ~ PA~Tl<lllAlt .. . • J l l . • c;:=====;:1/ ,-o PEli'FORM ¥ L!FE•SAVING OP1'1t1.TIONS E~H MORNING AT S 1000. EA<:H , IMPltOVE: 1"1-<E HEALTH o°i! 30 PATIENTS EV£Jl:Y AFTE~­ NOON, AT S;s: EACH, AS WELL AS OWN 1l<E MA.JORITY STOCI< IN A NURSING HOME ""'CM PROVIDES COMFORT rn SC<l CONVAl.ESCErNTS , FuruRt= DOCfORS of AMER.lei ;.EFT Hfl-F. PERKINS AT l lS',000, PEit YE.Ai-= IACH , '2'r---==-T'> -- By John Miies J DAILY Pl~T jf By Didi Moores By Charles Barsotti ,-------,...., Am& I wamt J,, MQ 'P-'-~~-""""<:IQ ~~ 1.1.j;>-- l'J~'/ >JOT! Gl!M.!"'f! 11<!0 !>1<<>1-1 io JceflltD oo~,._, 'j.OMA J.OPEZ CJ<. 6'1Cl!Ei.CJZ'!5 ~ur&: J fAT' lilt.L , SLOP* .~t .•• By Gus Arriola By Ferd Johnson By Roger Bollen 5·91,'*- "lmnglne, no lawn mowers, shrubbery or garden ho~ -and . Ibey call that a dru gstore!" -' DENNIS THE MENACE f,f.-1:: ' \ • ' I b .. : [ . ~""'l ' • I D.ctl Y PILOT LIGHTNING.QUICK DODGER-Willie Crawford o! the Dodgers slams Into Montreal second baseman Ron Hunt with such speed that even the camera couldn't stop the action completely. At least it might seem Skaters Going Pro Author of Love Story On Olympics TV Teatn Story and an annual entry In lbe Boston marathon. It appears obvious that the magoiflcenl ice skating duo of Jo Jo Starbuck and J<en Shelley will remain active -but as professionals. After the Do\vney couple placed fourth In the 1972 Olympics at Sapporo and third lo the '72 \Vorld championshi ps in <;anada. there was speculation I hey might either spilt up. turn pro or continue ;is amateurs until the 1976 Olympics in Denver. I-low that <1ualifies him lo be an Olym· pies color announcer is a mystery J can 't unrnvel. But, then after listening to Tom llawkins' basketball ·a n no u n c i n g , anything "'Ou ld seem bt'lter. Wednesday Shelley and Starbuck "'ill ,,,_____ ---- WHITE WASfl ·------- be together once again -lhi5 time at ri press conference called by lee Capades. One can only conclude that such gather- ing ill to announce they will become pros. ABC, aod that doe1n't stand for Alcoholic Beverage Control la this in- stance, announces that two well·known American pertonalltles wtll assist with Its ttlecaatlng of the summer Olympics tn J\tunlcb. Former Lagun.1 Beach resident Bill Toomey is slated to do a good 1bare of track aod field color and has the dual background to qualify for such duty - being tbe JN& Olympic decathlon cham· pion and subsequently an ABC track col· or man. But lbe other chap listed to handle lrack color Is Erich Segal, author of Lo,·e use freshn1an i\1ark Stevens picked Ufl a third place in the discus in Saturday's dual track meet with UCL.,_. tossing 154- 7. Stevens was the 1971 California state prep shot ·put champion \'lhile attendin~ NC'.\'port Harbor High. lie put the shot 53 feet plus but placed fourth in Saturday's dual classic. 4 /\fission Viejo resident Biii l'tlelton·s problems reflect those or bis employer , lbe Chicago \\'bite Sox. The Soi have been blanked in three of their lasl four games a.ad are scoreless their last 26 in- nings. Mellon, 1971 An1erican League homr run king ""ilh 33, has yet to hit a round- lrlpper this season artd has also com- mitted 111" errors. Big blo\vout Saturday night for the socially inclined. Jt's at Balboa Pavilion (upstairs) as the Coast Rangers soccer team puts on its 9th annual victory dance. ~lusic Unlimited \\'ill suppl y live sound to dance by fro1n 9 to 1 and door prizes 111i !J be up for grabs. Admission is by a S2 donati on \Vith the public cordially in- vited to the dance. \Vhich in lhe past has been a rirst rate event. Contract Pros May Get A Cl1ance at Davis Cup LOi\'DON (AP J -The possibility of !ht' \Vorld Championship Tennis professional); becoming elig ible for the 1973 Davis Cup t.:ould give lha1 \'encr<.1blc internat iona l tournament :-i !>hot in the arn1. The Jnternat1onRI Lawn Tennis Federa- tion, wh ich currently refuses 10 allo"' \VC'T pros to play on !he \1·orld tourna- ment circuit, has worked out a settlement of its differen ces "''ith \VCT boss Lamar Hunt. Ratification of the agreement at the ILTF annual meeting in Helsinki in July would put \\'CT players back on the tour next year. one or l\l'O 1vrcks. \l'OUld replace 1he pre sent elimination ro mpetit ions. which art' spread out ovrr .several months. It aly :ind Britain prerer keeping the competiliDn as presentl y structured. with national tea1ns competing home and away on an elimination basis. But they \vould like to have the fi rst round or con1- petition played one summer, end the rest or the tourn ament played the following year. By starting the first round late in the summer, Britain contends that the \\·eaker teams would be eliminated. giv· ing added appeal to the remaindel' of the tournan1enl. "'hich \l'(lllld begin tht: follo111tn,:? spr ing. • l • •· that 'vay in this photo. Actually, the reproduction machine had a spell o( the Stutters \Vhen-this picture \V35 transmitted. House Probes Crime in Pros, Mafia. Davis , \VASJJJNGTON <A P1 -Six alleged T\fatia figures plus horse-racing officials and entertainer Sammy Davis Jr. 11•ere annoWlccd Monday among witnesses for a }fouse probe inlo organized crime in- filtration of professi onal sports. Davis' testin1ony \\"ill be on crin1inll!s' ''effort to use him" at a racelrack in New Jersey \vhcre the si nger 0\1•ns a stable, said Chairinan Claude Pepper, (O. Fla.}. of the I-louse Select Comn1ittee on Crime. Pepper and the committee's chief counsel. Joseph A. Phillips. said the hear- ings \11ill start Tuesday on alleged race- fixing and organized-crime ties with 16 racetracks across !he country and then go into baseball. football. baskelball. and hockey. Philli ps said commillee investigator" concluded there have been instances or race fi:.:ing '"at praclically every !rack un t.he Eastern sc<1bo.ird and nlany in lhc \\'esL ·· He said the investigators arc still look- ing into a number or professional football and basketball teams. Some players wilt be calted, Phillips said. He said the committee will go into two instances of football players being approached to fix games but reporting the approaches to authorities. The committee will touch also on .,reports of alleged bribes" of public of- ficials . Pepper emphasized the com mittee \1•ould only hear testimony on the reports and wou ld not prejudge !he charges againsl any officials where trial is pen- ding:. The evidence flf sports rixing, Philllps said , includes a boxing match in r."tadison Square Garden in which New York authorities have implicated ii Ne1v Jersy organized-crime fi gu re. The probe \Viii start with !·laze.I Park Racing Association and its track near Detroit, Pepper said , and su bpoenaed witnesses include five Detroit Mafia figures. some of whom were on the association's board or directors. Newsmen asked if the wide publicity and official action against Hazel Park did not make that situation moot but Rep. Sam Steiger <R-Ariz. l. ;i ~·ommileer n11:on1bcr : said no. Expos Collect Hits, Dodgers Collect Victorv ,./ t.IONTREAL (AP 1 -The ri.·lontreal Expos had no trouble gett ing hits off Claude Osteen J\.1onday night. Runs. ho11·cver. \1·ere another matter. The velc ran left -hander earned his lhird viC'lory in four decisions by kreping !he Expos in check -though just barely -fnr 8 l /:l innings, then giving ,1·ay to Pete J\.1ikkelson in the ninth as the Dodgers defeated i\1ontreal 5·2. Los Angeles ~·on the game 1vlth four runs in the fourth inning. inclu-ding a tlvo- run home!' by Steve Garvey, his second or the season. The Expas got a run in each or the first 11.vo innings. but nothin g after that ··1 lhre1v fast balls about 90 percent of Dodgers .Slnle All ~"'H 111 ICFI !, .. I 11 •v P Dodue•~ •t New Y0<k M11v 10 Doog~rs 11 Ntw York Mav I! 0ocl9~rs 111 NIW York Mev I! Oodgtrs 111 Phllac!Pl~hi• Al,~y lJ Doclge•s 11 Pl!lladPIDh i• the lime out there ... expla ined Osteen after the game. "I have t1vo kinds of fast ball. onc·s a si nker and the other dips a bit.,. Un!ortu~ately for the Dodgers, neither was working all Iha!. well. The Expos \\'racked Osteen for 11 hits, had other base runners on three \1'aiks and three Los Angeles errors, but left a total of 12 1nen on base. "f didn 't have that much control.'' Os· teen conceded. "I could n't move the ball around like I 1vanted to. "F;,·ery time I got into a bit or a spot- and that means most of the ga me -I 1nixed in a fc1\' sliders \\'ith n1 y rasl b:il!s. ·· The C'.::;pos scored in the first on Ron llunrs lcadoff single, a passed ball by Dodger catcher Dick Dietz and Alike Jorgensen's run-scoring single to right. They scored again in the second on Ron Fairly's single and a double to deep left center by Hunt. The Dodgers got on the scorebbard in the third when Osteen drove in Garvey with a double. The Dodgers' four.run fourt h inning outburst closed out the: scoring and made a loser out of ~fontrea l starter Jlm l\ilcAnally, ~J. LOI Aftt•ln (5) Mlntr1•I U ) •-r ~•Ill H rhrr>I Wlll,,H •O OOHunl,lt S i l\ Bvc~~•, lb • o o o Joroen1cn. lb J o 1 I w.o~vii, ti • 1 ! o Woods, cf • o J o F.RDblnson, rr • o o o B•ll•v, 3b • o o o Crawto•d. II • l J O Sinflelon, If S O O O l~fetv•~. 7~ l 0 0 1 Fol , is • O o O Oieri, c J I I 1 8occabl:l11, c • o 1 o t.1rv!y, Jb J 1 I 2 F.Jlfly, rf J 1 I 11 O,ret<l, ft ) 0 I I Mtl\nally. D ' 0 0 0 Mi~kelstn. p o o o o l\l111lo•e, Dl'I I o l o Ltm•&1•r, p o O O o TDrrH, ph I 0 0 0 Strohm1y1r. p o o O O B1r.m1n, ph I O O O W•ll(tr. P 0 0 0 0 To11t1 11 S 1 $ Totals ll 2 11 J: LOI Anttlel 001 "'°° 000 -' Mr>nl•Hl no ooo aoo -2 If -0.rvry, Buckner, W!ll1. OP -Lot A~tlft 2. LOB -Los AnotlH 2, MO!l!r .. I 12. 2B -Hunt, 011ttn, 80<.C1btll1. HR -G•rv1y Ul, 'F - Ldfflvrt. " • • .. .. .. Osreen !W,)ol) ~ 1/J 11 ' ' ' ' M!kkel11tn >I> • • • • , McAn1 1ry !L.O·l) • • ' ' ' •• Lrm~1!tr ' ' • ' • ' Stro1>m1v1• ' • ' ' ' ' W~lker ' " ' ' ' ' .... M l~~llf\~ r n. ,. _ 0.1•l. Tl"'t - ' " A11tn11enct IJ .• , •. Lakers Rated \ As Best-ever . ' .... ) L loo Co Or I , .., out One-ye$r Team 1' I ,. • LOS ANGELES (AP) -The rest Is silence -at least for Bill Sharman. coach or the National Basketball A~ l>QCiation champion Los Angeles Lakers. Sharman and his Yl'ife. DoroUiy, leave today ror lv•o weeks of seclusion in Ha\vaii where he hopes to get rid of laryngitis which has plagued him for two months. In traveling to Hawaii, the first.year 1.aker coach whose team \\'On the NBA ti· tie Sunday nig ht is returning to the place a rigorous pre.season train)ng pro£ran1 for tbe Lakers was executed nine months ago. Los An geles, picked IG finish next to Jast in its division before the year started, stormed past the Ne\v York Knicks 114-100 Sunday to \\'in !he title series, 4-1. It was the first championiihip for the Los Angeles club. But before Sharman said goodbye tc> the ?i.fainland, he made a few observa~ tions of the season just concluded. He said he would like to see two titles a\varded eaeb seaso n in the NBA. One \vould go to the team with the best regular season record ; the other to the playoffs winner. "I don 't thin k it's fair•for a team to \\'Ork hard for five months and achieve the best season record and then be re· quired lo do it all over again in the playoffs,'' Sharman said. "Take a team like Atlanta. It finished with the 11th or 12th best record but it made the playoffs where anything can happen. A team can then get hot or another team could suffer a key injury.'' Sharman also touted his squad as "the best-ever·• one-year team baaed on its tecord of II wins, including playoffs. Bul he said the Boston Celtics, for \11hom he once played, merit t.he distinc- tion or the most consistent team, year in and year out. He doesn't believe the takers will match the dynasty the Celtics built dur· ing the sixties, but said they will be a formidable team in the immediate future. ...... - Cl YOE WRIGHT Wright Pitches Agai11st Red Sox Tonight at Big A It"s been two \veeks since he last pitched, but California Angels hurler Clyde Wright says he thinks he's ready. The 6-foot·l left hander will get his chance tonight when the Angels open a three-game home stand with the Boston Red Sox. Wright, 1·2 has been receiving heat treatments for a strained muscle in his Angeb Slate All 01m11 tft l(Mf'C C11f MIV 9 Allllt • ~~. "-? l~n Mtv 10 Ar!Qtl• •11. IHl~n MIV 11 Ar!Qe •I. l os!on MIV 12 Anllt"' VI, Ntw YO•~ M•v J) .-.,.,.eJ• v1. Hew Yo•~ l ;J5 r.rn. /:JS rt.rn. l:Jl o.m. 1;$ D.m. 7:55 o.m. le ft shoulder. but said after pitching 25 minuies Saturday that it £elt much bet- ter. · The absence of \Vright from the Angels' regular pitching rotation has hurt them and has been blamed in part for the team·s 7-10 record -y;orst in the American League West. But the Red Sox haven't done any bet· ter. They are tied for the cellar In. the East wilh Milwaukee. Each sport 4-10 records. Boston has lost three straight and • seven of their last eight games. They'll send I.ew Krausse, J.{), to the mound in hopes of snapping out of their slump lonight. "I know "'e'll be a year older nertr season, but I think we 'll be more coDo l fident .'' he said. "Unless w~ get cc>Jn...· placent, we should be even better ne.x• ; year. The team is used to my rysttm" now . Jt's like a fighter who becomtt .- champion. He always seems to flgbt bel· ter when he has the title." Sharman also predicted his LakeA would be iible to repeat as the NB'A ... chan1pions a1ain next year. '"There 's one thing I'd like to add," t'* hoarse coacb said. "Earlier, I criticlzia\ qur fans for not being enthusiastic or loud enough like lhe fans in New York or Boston. I take it all back. They're the~ best rans in th&. \\'orld. .r 1'Now, 1·m going to shut up ror two 1veeks . ., " $250,000 Not .:; Out of · Line,. Says Km·eem , .. . .. .. ~ITLWAUKEE (AP) _: Professional . sports is a business, and a $250,000-a·year: ~ or more salary is not ex:ceiisive for a star:. player, says the National Basketball Association·s Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. ,, "I feel that it's all justified," th~:: l\lillvaukee Bucks center, two-time NBA most valuable player, said in a televisioa;. intervie1v. ·• "The Bucks are a public corporation:,P an~ since I've been on the team, they· .. have made a lot more money than they did before. It 's all relattd to my presence " here," said the former UCLA star wb~: signed a five-year contract with thi Bucks estimated at more than $1 million,.,~ The Bucks, last their fir sl year in tht!lf NBA, which gave them draft rights to ~ 1 then Lew Alclndor, made the play.-Off* each of the three years he has been wltll'~· the team. They won the NBA title last"+ season. but lost to Los Angeles in thi.t :• year's \Vestern Division finals. . Basketball is "strictl y a busineu,''· .. Adbul-Jabbar said dur ing an interview art "· ''Black Journal,'' a New York produeed•.1, program . taped for presentation tooifhl· on a ~filwaukee public televisioo•1. station. "lr you don't do a job. you're gotten rifk~ of. like a lame horse," he said. "YOl.t!5 hear a lot or lip service about SPorts, bul ·' it's a money game." ·,1~ Basketball became a carter "rifjhl af(J~i I got out of high school" in New York, Adbul-Jabbar said . "I got a scholarshi,. that paid my way through college. That , was like money in the bank and I ke~ right up-with it." :\~ Asked \\'hy he boycotted the 1968 Olym~: · pies, he said: .... "The bla cks at the lime were pointint · out the futility of going to the Olympica. .. ': to earn gold medals for their country a™1:, then coming back here and bein1 sub~:· gated, I think we made our point. !;.t "This is my job, the Olympics are .... political thing," he said . "Basketball i~ ·{ big business, and I feel that I must try to l succeed in this business because the ~.-~ portunity doesn't come twice." ·•·4· Blacks ex: cell in sPorts "because we'ril' ~, hungry," he said. "We have more desire,\''. to ex:cel. You don't iiee too many broth..-•·· on \Vall Street. The only time you see them succeed in our economy and soclaf:; environment is through sports. .' ,,. Abdul-Jabbar, "'ho changed his narfle1 afttr conversion to Islam, said he foll1tdt · the religion "to ~ what I netd to Jeicf. my life correctly. • :.~ "My name was given to me," he saiA;, "It means 'Generous, 'Servant of Alla~i··~ and pov.·erful. I try to live up to these 1t-:·1 lributes and kind of. incorporate these:: things into my life. If I'm not corr~·,. they will kind of tell on me." ' Life in r.1ilwauket, the New Yorker said, is alien to him. fl ''It 's middle America," he said. "J' r5 from Harlem. If ever there were two o · posite points, this is an example." He seid he: makes few public a~J pea.ranees because "the season is so Jonlf it wears you out . "Once it's over, there's not much time. J hear critiei.sm from the brotbers for rilot doing this and not doing that, but it:k· ' ~ very hard, like having youfhands tied.'<'!:. '. man can't do everything." ·'1• r.~: Backus Is Next ,, ' After Lewis Win·!';: .. ~i~· ma La def 2 . c lo Ah d'f Na Mc c F u t all-ti vars DAI Co owe pion Sun whil fell P.far team Th pari c .. m Ille t Poi basis the i 'Th High ' Foun Baba. with Ion WIS Stlac Ba for F ~!» fr (41.3 \ Hui des pi fly f time Ev at' Hu ln:lhe allo t 5'.41 pr.ior Fiv be>ts and 2 Cll'rey 200 fr fr~e r R v Gold C.Oll~g C.Olleg junior f\.1ay I cos Confer playoff The three o Wes'! doub1e 111• S;,h M tr~Co The possibil ity of \VCT players com- peting tn lhe Davis Cup \\'as raised by ILTF Presldcnl Allan ll1•vn1iln Ru t th;il decision 11·ould h:i1·t lo tW n1adr by lhe Davis Cup nation,; lhcin,rll l·~. and Hu·\· l'Urrently ba r all contr:1c1 ix·os . · Among the \\ICT players "'ho could be added to the various Oa\'is Cup rostc.r )l; are Arthur Ashe ;ind Clift Richey. Rod Liver, John Newcombe and K e n Rolewall, Tom Okker, Roger Taylor and )fart CoL Wooden Explai·ns Snub of Olympics. LOS ANGELES (AP ) -T ~'j; \velterweight contender He:dgemon Lewi~,· of Detroit scored a un11inimous 10.rou'\4 '~ decision over ~1e1ico City knockout artJSf. Ruben Vasqutz In • featured bout hetl ... MondRy night. ;";'1 Lewis, 148, scored the only knockdo\f)f P of the fight when he humbled VaSCJ'IOi. 141~. with a solid ri&bt cross in lhe .....,; ' ond round. ' ~ •. ,g pla y lh at 3 th In th circi'itt I Wtilte Coast) In ' first Basil lldy, secrelary ol 1111 DavJJ Cup ulloos. onnounced Mondly that pr .. .,...11 devised by tho Untied Stales, Italy end Br1toln for rHhoplng Ill< Davis Cup •·01dd be pieced '"' the 1gend1 for the '"' lluol meeting b<re July I. The American plan calls ror each zone 1a.,U., JUI ow• lolrnamenl. •long the 119 ttt-t.he womm's Jl'tder111Uon Cup. Thus, .,,. bJc xooll 1oun1omro~ la Ung • CINCINNATI (AP) -John Wooden, coach of alx conseeutJve national col· Jealate championship baskolball learns al UCLA, says college playen aren't in· tertsted In the Olymptcs anymore because the Games have become 1 political issue. "I think the.re Is a feeling that tht ,i:pirit of the Gan1 s Jms banged ." ~oodt:n .5Aid In • rect:nt lntervltw ... ,t his ~me more pnllflcal , .. the til'b just don't have the desire anymore.'' or are we participating against all coun- Wooden says the stress on United tries? Stiteii compeUUon with Russia has UCLA center Bill Walton nlready an- dlmlnl'bed the appe•l of the Olympics for nounced !hot be wouldn't compete In lbe America's young athleles. Olymplcs bec•use ol knee probloms, and "Whtn you ask the ave.rage person \Voodcn says he wouldft't try to convince about the OlympJcs,',' \Yooden said, "}~e'll any of his players to participa.tt. ask: 'how are we going to do against the "l'1n just a~· patriotic as anyone, but Ru55lans!' -l'vci. become a bit dlstllusioncd with the "Is that what !ht OJ)rmpics arc" Are polilical nature of the Olympi cs ... aiid "1c partlrlp;Hing against just onr te;im, olhtt thing~." I r ' Woodm suggested thot to rtlurn tbe Games to their true meanlnf all ftationa "should gather their best basketball players • • • their beat albleles ••• wlllloul "lord lo professional standln(. "'Ibe other nations say our college scholarships make an athlete a pro. fessional. \Ve say their substdles make them profes.slooal.-lf we·re going to ha,·e - Olympic glmC$, just put in the best athltlcs. '' · Vuqu" rallied and managed to 111~' • Lewis blow-for.bJow throu&hout Ibo ~'· of tile n111ch. 0 · Lewis ron hiJ career rocord to 1t.J.1<J,;" he competed In hll llrtt match In fl" ' morilbl. V1iquoi, wbo WI! rtdln1 • •lnil ·· or 10 strall]rt koockout.s going Into lliiiJ. flg~t. sow his record slip to 22-3. • r11. Lewis will metl Billy Backu..•h -of Syracuse, in Syr1cuse June Ji ln ·~.1 round match to decide !he holder of .1~t'9,.1 York's verskln or the welterweight crown: ' Long uled to thl··Me 'l'lio pli;'ed Mtltlo wlll als l!olde South tht•fig !. 'I LAGVNANS COP TO URNEY T I TLE Laguna Beach's girls volleybail team took first place at the annual Santa Ana College Invitational tournament for Orange County High School1 Saturday. In the double elimination fJVent. Laj!:una outlasted ~1ater Dei through three matches, n•inning two and losing one. Laguna . the defend ini: c h a m pi all , defeated Mater Dei in the final malch, 15--2, 7-15, 15-10. Coro11a del T\1ar took third place, losing t-0 Mater Dei, lf>-11, 1~9. Laguna 's team members are : F'rances Allnert . Nancy Allison . Nicki Burke. Can- dy' Covington. captain Marie Dvorak, Nancy Evans. Lori Keast, ~far i e MCCarthy and Damaris Meyers. Area Splasher s "-1nong All-time County Best Foothill High's Knights ha ve repeated as team champions in the third annual all-time Orange County hypothetical varsjty swim meet as compiled by the DAILY PILOT. Coach Tom OeLong's Knights. who 11wept to their second straight CJF cham- pionship Friday. outdistanced runnerup Sunny Hills with a 91h:-point margin while last year's runnerup, Fullerton, fell to a fifth place tie with Corona del ~1ar. the Ora nge Coast area·s highest learn finisher. The results were compiled by com- paring swim records from the 41 Orange County high Schools with points given for Che top six places. Diving was excluded. Poi nts were awarded on a 7·5-4-3·2·1 basis with relay points double that of the individual races. The fabled marks of Rancho Alamitos High's Gary Hall took a battering as Fountain Valley·s sensational junior Jack Babashoff bested ·his 200 freestyle time with a CIF record clocking of 1:42.4. And Hall's 400 freestyle time of 3:39.2 w1s equalled by Foothill's junior Rod Strrachan. Eabashoff picked up additional points for Fountain Valley with a third in the 111 free (3:43.7/ and fifth in the 100 free ( 41.31. Huntington Beach·s CJay Ev an s, daSpite sailing to a 51.4 in the 100 butter- fly Friday. ranks second to Hairs all· time best of 51.1. Evans holds every individual swim title af Huntington Beach'. the only sw1mmer ln:the county able to claim that feat. He alk> h,olds the Marina 100 fly standard ~ S6.4) whi ch he established as a freshman pr.ior to lransfering to Huntington. f ive of the all-time Orange County belits are CJF records. Hal l's 100 back arid 200 lndo times, Sunny Hills' Steve c i rey in the 50 free (21.4 l. Babashoff's 200 free and F'oothill"s 3: 15.7 in the 400 frl!e rate as CIF bests. All·li~ Or1n111 County Mnt IDO medlt Y rtllY -!. Sunny Hill) I: .0.8; 1-FQ(ltl\, I 1 U.D; J. Ar.1111·m 1:,1.6: .t. ces11 Mt11 l :~J.'1 s. FvOer!on 1:41.3; '· Cortn1 d.i Mt t 1:,2.f. XIO l•et -I. ••b•s/lclff (l'lunt~I" VtlltYI I :~ .• , J. Hill IRtncl>o .&.l1mi1~1 1 :4.1.'; l, S. Furniu tFOO!llill f 1:1-1• 4. K. Kntll'ltMll fClritlW dtl Mt r) l :~,1; l. Sl•t'lll .fFullt r1on) 1:•5.6; '· $. L1sllbrook , .. ~ .... 1 ... 1 1 '6.•. XIO Ind. me,.l~y -I. 11111 !R1nc1>o Al•m i•osl 1 Sl.•: ). 5 . ."'urn1\< fF00111111 1 1:54.•; J, l!Yllll t..,u.,_ tl•n l11c~I l:f1.J; •-&oss fL1 Qv1nt1J l :S9.J1 S l!i1\ Ntwton 15unny Hills) Ind Rtldenbl!JOI\ 45ftr1l J;nJ.•. s& .. rr•t -I. C1r1¥ <Sunny Hill•) 11 .•; 2. (!'•\ Fi•Wlrv !S .. ¥i1e) al'IC! Zorn i eu~n8 F'ar~l Jl .S; •· Miiier (Foolt.illl Jl.f; J. •¥1r11 (Muntln11ton l e1clll }1.1: '· lllll ¥1rmt• CN1wMrt H1rbor), Olson (lttr.chfl Al1m1101J 1NI Rolin !l ll\tin) n .l. 1911 tlY -l ti~ll flt1ncl>o ,t.l~m!los SI.I' 2. EYI ... IHOl!tlno,.n •••ell) JI.I; l . 5. C1meron !Lt ~•b•~I '1 ,I •. Artll l.&.r.ellelml $2.l: J. Hldlt !$tn!laool SJ.); 1. !i1mmcin rent• Mn1J SJ.I. 1'11 l•f~ •. l. r.-r~y tSur>n• Hlll5) ''·1' 1. K. liC•UJllPholr rcoran1 dtl M1r) n .s1 l. Zarn !811~8 Pit\ 11.1: •. Miiier (Foo!lllll) n .t ; J, l1b1sllolf IJ'tu!l!l!n Ville¥) 41.J; 6. Brown (Full1rtonf 4 .1. '(19 1r1e -I. 0 11) s rr1tllan lFootllllll •nd 1111! llttnclln Alam.rns ) 3:39.J; l . ••b•IM" fll'o11nt1ln Vt~¥) ,:,~.J . •. Ltn-IW~'1trn l l : .... ,; J. S!r~!'lli: 1iturir rtnnJ )·16.S; 6, (llr l S. La<hbrook (Anllle•ml 1nd A1h1 (MtWPlrl H1rbotl J;q ,f. lllO ~cit -1. Htll llt1ncl>o ,.,,,,..,;tosl 51.5: !. ~cllwlrl! ISunny Hlll~l Sl.S: l . S. Furnln !Foo!h•ld !5.0; 4. IHI) EYI M !Huntlnttl!l ltl ChJ Ind ilt~•aen· b~unll <Sonortl .~5.2: •· Mlsloltlr !Cast• Mntl SJ,,, 100 brftll -1. W•bb (Fulltrtonl 1:01 .6: 2. Mill•r IE-Oor1dcl) 1:01.t; l . Y1rwooll (Cotti Mtlt l l:02.l 1 1 (!lei Oul'i& (Va lrnci~l and !lrid<lei !LowrlU l.Cf.J : 1. S l'u•nT•s (~001111111 l:CJ,1. 4Q10 lree r1l~Y-I. FO<ltl\111 J:l!.7; J. caron1 d1I Mi r J :1r.1; l .&.n8,...lm J:ll6; •. Sunnv Hl!ll J:19.0; J, Fu•t rton l :tt.I; '· Co111 Mttl J:lt.I. Fjnll •CM ll'!<'I· 1. F""tllill ISOl. 1 ~u~ny Hi'li (401.,.t, l )lf1ncl'>o A!1mlk11 fl2.,..), •· .&.nahtlm ('l!'l'J). J. fllt) C.tritnt d•I ~•r 1n~ Fullerlon 1'0!. J. C11111 "'"' H4! I. Hvntlnallln 811c~ flJi~J. t. 1'01,111111~ V1fl•v fl'l\ 'H'I !lu!n• F'•r~ ll''>l· 11 E l Oor~,jo Ill. \J. Servltt 'r•'•il. ll. /llel SO"or~ 1nd Lt H1br1 !•I. ''· L• "ouln!• 11'1<'1 We1tt•n !t l. !7. 0 1,1 V•ll~e1• ~nd L-•n (]'Ill. ,,, San!11go (J), 10. N1WMr1 M••iaar ISi•. Jl. 1u111n Clll. .. Rustlers Meet Valley Titlist Golden West College will race either College or the Sequoias or Fresno City College in the rirst round of the state junior college baseball playoffs Friday, May 19. COS and Fresno lied ror the Valley Conference title and will meet in a playoff this week . The Valley circuit winner will host three other conferences (including Golden Wes'! in . th~ u~per bracke t round robin doub1e ehm1nat1on playoffs. 111e other first round game matches S;\h ,Mateo (Camino Norle J against Con· trl Costa (Golden Gate ). V Golden West is successful In Its 11 a.el, game with the V;illey winner, it will plaY !he San 1'-fRleo-Contra Costa victor at 3 thAt ~ame day . tn·the lo\ver bracket. the Melropolltan circliit winner tangles with Ventura I We.!tern State) and Ccrrilos (South Coast) faces· San Bernardino (Mjsslon) in' first round tests. Long 'Beach ind rasadena are sched- uled to meet in 1 pl.!!yoff !his week for thl'-Melrt1 crown. tt7@ lower bracket games will be pl!lrtd at the home field ol the Mttt'opolltan winner. The Metro circuit will also host the state finals, May 26-27. boldeo W~st's Rustlcrli , w\Mer1 of the Sollthl!rn C:.lilomla C.Onlerence. flnl!htd tht'rtgular ,.,..,. with 1 ~11 re<ord. I., DAJ LV PILOT i.7 • $25,000 to · Devlin Trap Explosion Key to Victory HOUSTON (AP I -"No one will ever know "·hat a difficult shot it was. l can·t tell you how tough it was -I don"t have the words." A Australian Bru~ De\•lin ""as discussing an explosion shot from 1 sand trap on the 14th hole that he <'ailed the kty t(I his vic- tory in the rain-delayed final round of the Houston Open golf tournament Monday . He blasted out to within a foot or the cup, 1ank the: putt, Sa\·ed par '"'o more times coming home and birdied the 17th hole for a par matching 72 that brought him his eighth victory since he aban· doned a car~r as a 1naster plumber 1n Armidale, Australia lo try his luck on the American pro golf tour . Devlin, a slim. 34-year-old who ha!ii cut down on his tour appearance.!! to con· cen trate on a gol f course architecture busi ness in ~1iami. posted a 72-hole total of 278-10 under par on the \\'et and soggy West wood Cou ntry Club course -as he won by two st rokes. Veteran Doug Sanders . Tommy Aaron and Lou Graham V.'ere next at 280. It 11•as the third second-place finish (If the )'ear for Aaron, who once caught !he fronl·run- ning Aussie ,.,.ith 11 birdie on the 17th hott, they bogeyed the final hole when he hlt a tree off the tee. And just a lltlle bit in a hurry. "I want to go see my son."' said Devlin. Four-year-old Kurt had a minor ()peration in a Houston h<lspital shortly before Devlin teed off. Devl in held a two stroke margin when they started play on the mild. sunn y day and held 1t most of the way. But Aaron, playing se\·eral holrs in front of him, wa~ closing strongly \.\'hen Bruce \.\'('nt to the tee: on the 2J-t yard, par three 141h, He hit a lhrer wood. and ll plunged dead in the n\iddle of a bunkrr. "It 1vas plugged so deep I t'ouldn 't even )ilel al it 11·ith a sand iron." he said. " [ took a pitchini;: \vedge and hit straight down on lt and the ball came out about a fool from !hf' hole. "I could put 100 balls in lhe same pos1- l1fln and ne ver come close again," h~ said. Dodd Pitches UCI Shutout Over Cal, 1-0 BROCK PEMBERTON LED THE MARINA VIKINGS TO A CIF PLAYOFF BERTH Aaron had a 69. Graham closed with 1 67 and Sanders took a 71. BERKELEY--.Tom Dodd mad!•~"-----! first start of the season a comple1e game MARK BARR Weight Loss Helped Barr To Top Seaso11 By CRAIG SHEFF 01 t~t OIUy l'llGI Siii! The Joss or 30 pounds has made Mark Barr a better pitcher and enabled Golden West College to win its first conferen ce baseball title. The sophomore Rustler right-hander was a stout 225 pounds last seaso n in compiling a 4-5 mark. but he trimmed down to 194 before the start of the '72 campaign and as a result the Rustlers are in the state playoffs. ''The loss of weight has made him stronger and his ball livelier,'• sa ys Golden West coach Fred Hoover. "He lasts a lot longer, .he's in better shape and he kn ows it and that confidence has made him a better pitcher .. , Barr comes from a baseball family. His brother Jim pitches for the San :Francisco Giants and was recently elected player representative. Jim pla yed for Hoover at Lynwood High for three seasons before going on to the University of Southern California where he pitched for another four years. "Both Jim and Mark are great control pitchers," says Hoover. "ln Jim's senior year at Lynwood he walked just seven batters in 102 innings. Mark had 24 walks this past season iri 125 innings. .. Both have great concentration and both are very intelligent kids." says Hoo- ver in comparing the two. ··Jim thrO\.\'S a little harder but ~1ark has better bre;i k. ing pitches than Jim rlid at 1'-1ark's age." Barr recorded a !().S record this pa~t season and a 6-2 Southern Cal iforn ia circuit mark. llis "-'in total set a Golden \Vest reCord. wiping out the old mark of six established by Dave Paynter in 1969. He also has sel a batch of other marks th is season . inclurtlng innings pitched (l2S), strikeouts (98), conference e.r.a. (1.45 ) and shutouts !2). Barr wlll probably be the starling pitcher when the Rustlers open the state playoffs May 19 against Fre~no CC or College of Sequoias. · Like his brother. the Rustler star would !Ike lo play professtonal ball . "He wants to play pro ball. but by the 11ame token he would like to go to USC like._ hi!; brother did. But SC has only sent one Jetter to him Rnd the rest nf the big schools arc Inquiring regularly. He has shown-' some interest in Cal State (Fullerton J and Chapman ,'' sa ys Hoover. "He's an outstanding kid and he shou1d have a great future in baseball. I re.ally don 't know what his po1ent1al is. but he is 1olng In get bolter without 1 doubt. How much better 1 don't know," says Hoover. Marina's Pemberton Does It With Arm, Bat; Pitches, and Bats .500 By PHIL ROSS Of the DtJly Plitt Stiff While they didn 't go too well for Brock at the time, motorcycle inj uries suffer· ed nearly l\.\'O years ago by the current Marina High baseball star may have been a good omen in disguise. The accident occurred during the sum· mer following Pemberton·s sophomore year on the Vikirig campus and il ha p- pened after the Oklahoma native had been a three·sport participant {footba\l , basketball and baseball L At any ra te, after his recovery from in· juries. Pemberton decided he"d con- centrate on one spo rt -and baseball was it. One pe rson \\'ho was overjoyed because of Pemberton's decision lo stick to the ho rsehide sport was Marina diamond mentor Ray Allen. Allen says, "baseball has been Brock's only sport since the accident and this is his third year on the varsity and his sec· ond ye a r as our le a m captain, something which I think demonstrates his leadership ability. "It's hard to ask a player to try and concentrate on ,.,.,.o things like pitching and playing another position but Brock has been very steady all along while doing that." As a pitcher over his three-year span on the Viking varsity. Pemberton has compiled an enviable record. His 12·9 career mark is belied by the f;ict the Vike defense seems lo open up fielding gaps each time the slick southpav; takes to the mound . However , Pemberton's hurlin g pro- ficiency shov.•s up in his earned run average figures . good curve and changeup to go with a good, live fastball . He "s v.•hat you"d call deceptively fast." \Vhile Pemberton sho\vs s u pe r i o r mound skills, Allen adds, .. Brock 's future is probably as a first baseman. since most of the scouts have wanted to see hin1 when he plays first base. "He only has One error in !he three yea rs at first base and he "s also the only player we have who's been on hase in all 19 games. either by a hit, walk, getting hit by a pitch or \1•hatever ." In regard to Pemberton·s prowess wi1h lhe bat. Allen comments. "he's probably the best high school hitter I've coached. He rarely, if ever, goes for a bad pitch." As an example. Pemberton is currently hig h among the Orange Coast area bat- ting Charts with a .486 overall ave rage 134 of 701 and is stroking the bait at a .500 clip in league circles {16-for-32 J with tv.•o games remaining. He set the school rbi standard of 22 htst season while also pounding out three home runs (he has one circuit bla'st this spring 1. Baseball is nothing new to the Pem- berton family. Brock 's dad was a professional player in lhe mid\.\·est in his heyday and older brother. Michael, starred at Golden Wes t. before moving on lo the University of Tulsa. \1•here he 's in his second campaign as the slarting catcher on the Golden Hurrican e varsity. Allen thinks Pemberton Is a cinch to be plucked in the next major league baseball draft and sums up Pemberton ',; ability in one sentence: "he has speed. power, a good arm and can hit and run well." Rookie Chuck Thorpe, 72. Jack Ew\R$:. 72. and Chuck Courtney, 69, were lied at 281 and young Hale Irwin was alone 11t 282 after 1 final 74 in th is event that was shunned by many (If the game's greftt stars. including Jac:C:: Nicklaus. Arnold Palmer. Lee Trevino, Billy Casper and Gary Pla yer. The Monday round was necessilaled when a day-long rain washed out Sun· da y's fourth rou nd. Devlln, oow in his 11th year on !he American circuit but a ncin-~·inner for two years. was his usual sell after pick- ing up the $25,CXXJ first place check-self· contained, low-key, quietly courteous. Football at MD Mater Oei High football coach Bob Woods welcomed 13 retuming varsity let· lermen to spring drills Monday as the Monarchs get a one-week jump on the rest or the Orange Coast area . The Angelus League member Monarchs will work out three d11yg the first week, then five days 1 week for two weeks. The fourth week will be capped by a spring game (In June 1 at Sa nta Ana Stadium (7 o'clock). In 43 innings so far this season, Pemberton has mixed pitches well in striking out 41 batters. walking just. JO and racking up an impressive l.20 e.r.a. although his record is but 4-4 (2·1 in the Sunset League I. Baseball Standings In 1971. Pemberton was 7.5 on the season with a 1.90 e.r.a. and he chucked a no-hitter against Newport Harbor . As a soph two years ago. he worked only 10 innings (one start and complete game plus three innings of relief duty ) anrl was credited with a 1-0 record and 2.00 e.r.a. Pemberton's 12 wins are a Marina career record ! a distinction he shares with present Golden West College lefty Dave Klungreseter J and he had the single season school record of seve n victories in 1971 unti l 1hat was surpassed by flashy right handed sophomore mate Greg Foste r last week . NATIONAL LEAGUE Eas t Division • w L New York 12 6 Philadelphia 13 7 Montreal l 7 Pitlsburgh B 10 Chicagn B II St. Louis 8 II West Olvitdon Houston 12 6 Los Angeles 13 B San Diego 9 12 Cincinnati 8 II Atlanta 8 13 San Francisco ' 15 MtMIY'I ltetull ltt An,11•' J. lo!o,.!rtt! ' Only ...... ,, IClll!dull!d. Tld1J•t Gl"'t\ Pct. .667 .650 .611 .444 .421 .421 .667 .619 .429 .421 .381 .318 GB I 4 4'1 41\ ,, 411 4'\ 51\ 7 Says Allen of Pemberton's pitching repertoire, ''Brock relies ma inly on a 5 .. ,. Frtntll(ll !M1r;c1111 '") at Mon1te11 l f o,. •ez •O>. "Ith! l11 Ant1lt 1 1 00.....nl"~ 1·11 11 Ntw York fMll• l1ck J·O). l'ltM B I S1n OltOtl IK!•bY l·I) ti l'lllll dflohll {ltl'V'9\lll N ewpor·t OW ers 11~:.~>.~"n~~~M .. J l·I) •I Jt. Laul1 t lei~•1 1.11, nl~h! P ,. ·rQll (Etllt J.1) 11 .&.llt nte fl(~JltY 1.11. G nl1hl Eye N e'v i·eens c~:~ .. :'n./J:;~l;• 1·11 .. (lnd"n•U (McG1o1i.. WM110Ml1y•1 Gt"''' St" Fr•ncl1<0 11 MO'llrrtl, nfthl Newport Harbor Lawn Bowling Club is L11 ... ,.,,,,, 11 N•w Yo,., n11111 Si n Dltoo 11 Phll1dtlit~:1, nlthl planning 11 move from the peninsula 11ou11nn 11 s1. LOI.II•. n;,M gl·cens th11l have long been associated PUhbu•q~ •1 -.u•M•. nloh1 AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division w L Detroit JO 6 Baltimore 10 7 Clevel:1nd 10 7 New York 6 II Boston I 10 Milwaukee I 10 West Division Minnesota 12 4 Oaklend 10 4 Chicego 9 ! Te1as 8 to Kansas City ! II Callfnr nia 1 10 M1ntl ff'I Jl11v1t N'"' Y~rli !, ~l·n~•'.ftlt ) Onlv 11m@1 'fllteul...,, Ttdt f'\ Ol"'H Pet. .62.1 .588 .558 .35.1 .286 .286 .750 .714 .529 .144 .421 .412 GB \\ \\ 4\\ 5 5 I 31> 4 51\ rn Mllw•Y~!t !~IUfl'I 1-ll •rid loc~"'W)O)d l&.11 ,, O••.l•n.tt !Hollrmt~ J·ll •'Id IOdom M l. J twl-nlont lo\lon {l(r1U•J• t.01 It Cltlltr~lt fWl'ltht l·Jl, nleht N•w Ynrk <"e!~•i.on 0") •f Ml-l.ol.it (ICl tl 1·01. n19M Dttrall !Colem111 J,I) 1 1 C~ic•to CWood •·!l, .. 1,111 1(1ns11 CitY IS11llt1orlf J.JI I t (leYl!ltnd !Tld· rew l ·U. n!thl l~••' (8roM•t 1·11 " a 111lmore !McN1ll\I .J.11, llltM Wtdltf'1d1f'1 ··-Mllwt uktt 11 01kl•nd. "''~' &otlOll 11 C1Ull•"''· ~10111 New York 11 MlnMHtt, 11!thl Ofotrell " CMt llO ICll'NI Cl!Y 41 Clh•fl11Wi T11r:1~ •t a.111..,.,,, nltM C~lc•oo •• Clncrnn•H with the sport . li------------------------------lt will be. 11! lea~l a year berore the move Is consummated, however. 11.s the new locat ion on four acres of Jrvtnc Ranch property near Fashion Tsland will not be rtady before that time. DEAN LEWIS The current green th11.t can ac· commodate players on eight rinks "t one 1966 HARBOit BLVD., COSTA MESA time. has been In use since 1938 and the S.rvl(• and Parts for All Imported Cara 646°9303 winnirig effort ~1onday afternoon as coech Gary Adams UC lr\'ine Anteat er baseball learn handed host Callfornia ~ l·O defeat. The \'ictory was the first In three games in Northern California for the UC [ nine with the final tilt today at Stanford \Yith Gary \Vhrl'lock (9·31 on the mound for the Anlenters. UCI now sports a 30.17-1 record for the year. 1he third successive season in which UCI has won 30 or more games. The Anteaters are leading contenders lor an NCAA pl;iyoff berth . The ~election commiltee for the western rc,i::ional tournament held a con: ference call today to get prelim inary details out of the wa y. In ihe game Monday. UC I Sl'flrrd the !Ont" run of the game in the sixth inning' \\'hen Dave Lyons Jeri off with a si ngle and Dan C.:orona~o garnered the onl y ei.· Ira base blow of the trip, a double lo left. sending Lyons to th ird. .Jeff Matinoff. the Anteaters' lead ing r bi man, was lntenlionatly wa lked and Terry Stupy popped --out. This ,get the 11age for Dan Hansen's ground ball to deep shortstop and the only play was at first base with Lyons scoring. California threatened in the ninth with ll pair of singles after two outs but Dodd rose lo the occasion to get the final out on a popup to end the iamr. This was only the fourth shutout of th@ year for UC I and only the second com- plele game whitewash verdict registered. by the Anteater staU . ' UC! closes out the re1Xular seAson \Vednesday lll home against Cal State · l Fullerton) with Jerry Maras scheduled' to pitch. Uc 1 .... 1n1 111 C•l!lernl• UI .. ' fl rlll .. ''"" Moll<1t, " • Tulle, I • " • ' Lvon1. " • ' I • &1rn4rd, ,, • ' CorO..tdo, " • • ' • Cummin g1, " • I M411noll, " ' • • • Het'nlndtr. lb • • S!upy, ' • • • • Htrr11!, " • I H1nlOM0 H • • I I Tlln,,,,.s, lb • • ' 5Dtn(I, ' • • I • Wtr1rct1. c ' • • ,.., ... , H • • I • Hoooer, " • • • Onde, P ' • • • Dtl Ctrle, • • • ' To111, " I ' ' TOlll\ " 0 • Sctr• lly lnnl1111 UC l•~in, (;Aljfornl• . ' . OOtl 001 000 -1 1 I) 000 OOtl 000 -11 I O DEAN LEWIS 1972 TOYOTA CARINA WITH FACTORY Al R CONDITIONING s7200 PER • MONTH SM.JO Total Down -172.00 Total Monthly '•Ym•nfI •llS20 fer Forty lltht Mo1. DeforrM - llSJ0.00/folh -J27M.70 A'lt 12.76 on apprevM credit, 1972 VOLVO 142 SEDAN WITH FACTORY AIR CONDITIONING PU MONTH 1117.46 Totol 0.Wn -o.fert9'1 UOS7.4'. C11h ''lea '424'.27 Incl. T & L/A'lt 1S.U on ,,,_ crttlltt 1972 TOYOTA MK II STATION WAGON WITH FACTORY AIR CONDITION ING snaoo PU 7 MONTH :· •• • • : •• 0 ,. club has grown to 109 members. Sh I •11 c The new location will have two greens. Modern Body op or ~ •rs 1 1~1.as Tot1l Down /ltt.M Totol 120-feet square. each aceommodating Ora_nge County's Largest and Most Modern Toyot1 and. \'olvo Dealer Monthly 'Ymt. for '°"Y ~11tt.t _ eight rinks. thus doubling the sitt of· the: r I--Montlia. o.torttlll 14111.SJ APl current la yout lt will be located at OVIASIAI DILIVlltY l,ICIALll 'fl !::i,. (lltT7'000 -"'"1 ~"T#: Crown Drive and San Joaquin Hills road. .. _______________________________________ _ Start Y ou1· Engines! By Deke 1-loulgate Harness Racing Entries Bobby Unser'a domjn1tion or the field In the Indianapolis ~ &oing in doesn 't perturb J. C. Agajanian ll'i he prepares for his umpteen th appearance at the spttd14·ay as a car owner. "When a team 1!5 ~ much morr outstanding than all Ule other•." Aggie sa id, "it's someth ing you just have to contend \\•Ith. However. being the fastest car and driver doesn 't neces· aarlly mean you art. going to Y:ln. ,.l.T 11oca -0 ,.. "'''t ~ttt. I "''' ol111 & 11f'ldt • • .,e_t~~tr 1 •1c11. 1o1.a •'••Ill< J ¥tt• e~' & u..a1•. non-w·n~•• n.ooo 1 NW n Pu••• u.a . l ..CIY tj u, A l "llt n "ln 1962 Parnel!i (Jones) cracked the 150 mile an hour bar· rier in my car, end 14'e were M much better than lht other teams .we should ha ve v.·on the race, but \\'t didn't. "Take A.ex i\ia ys. Every race he 'l'-'ent to he had fast time. it &eemed like. The guy was 50 nulst.1nding , he won everything in sight , but he never did win at Indianapolis. '1 ·Agajanian 1s banking on a driver. Mike fi.fo.!iley. "'ho is highly regarded by racinJ: in.!iiders. a legendary team manager. A. J. WaUon. and a car that ""on the race four year.!i ago, a 1968 Eagle lurbcH)ffy . "Mike lo my mind is a super star in the miik ing." Aggie said. ''He doesn 't look flash y. He just goes. In '"'O laps he is up to 1petd. In practice. he 's oot like & lot of guys, who do 10 laps to get the fttl of the car or s~nd half the day working their way up to spttd. and then get going ." * * A11Jan lan's Vivllar Special is ctM'l•'ned by R1lpb \\'ilke of Milwaukee, •·ho m1y on ly 5t.e lbe car rac~ 1¥>'0 or three limes ~-thl1 year. He •·on 't fly . Agajanlan said. and for that reason be 'only 1ttend1 lbe r1ce1 •·llbin easy commutln1 distance of his hometown. The team ha8 another pecullarlty, the pre5ence of the drlre-r'1 father, Shorty Mosley, on the mechanical crew. Mike's dad iJI comp11ed by A1ajanl1n with Ralph Ruttman, father flf Troy. wtm was always 11ound whe.n tbe youn1 Jndlanapoll1 winner was drlvtn1 for Aggie. Toda y tbe only other active father·IOD lndlanapofi1 racing team consl1t1 of A. J. Fflyt. Sr. and Jr. * * * Shorty fi.·losley is one of !he sport 's better mechanics, And he oversees much of the cre-w's operation. according to Aggie. 'With more than a profesliional intere.!if in the performance of the ---~race car.-He-is-ali;o....kloking-out for his son's safety. Agaja nian expects the big ra ce to be "tremendously fasl for some reason," and he hopes the new tire rule will not hurt 'the 500. The new rule , previously discussed in these columns. will allow the drivers to change to different types of lires during the race, making possible the use of sptcial ''qualifying tires." "The old rule requ ired every driver to ra ce on the same lype of tire he used to qualify for the race. The ne\v rule sla tes only that he must start lhe rac e on the same tires he qualified with. "It's a big expense In the tire companies." Agajanian said. , '1lf J was buying 'em . I'd be squawking. l was the one \\'ho ·complained in the early years because we had to take two sets : ol. tires and wheels to every championship race. : "Now it i.s an expense to the tire companies. because they : Provide all the tires and wheels. That's a lot of money when you : think .in terms of IO cars entered Jn the race.'' ' Relllew of Helt11el Bill Fascinating. That was the only word to descri be proceedings , ln Sacramento that led tn passage by th e Asse mbly Transporta· 'tion Committee of AB 744, the bill that would require all st reet ridden motorcycles to ha ve riders aboard wearing safety helmets ln the state. Sv"'"'"'' !1•8u,.,, J Ou•n•I lllCflt lOr ''"· 0 .0.(~""''" M 'o l l!0.•1M, " ltQ<Cll•D lo•Mll•O N't rou1l11, ,J 0'1••.-. e,,ny M1rc11t1, ( !l"Yll L>iMbl• l •t!. J Wlllll"'I a11co. W1y, Ci 1•"'1111'• l l (OlllD I.I.Cl -O"'• ,..,._ •1ct (11bnin• AU t•tl. 0,.....-1,.,.., el t rt.c.t l •llCI A"rll I. "v•lt 11,$00, Clt lllllllf "'"' 11.soo. S111wnto "•'<", ' 1-<l~M'I 0 es AdMlr1I. 5 Dtlll"''' l t lrd. J Sflt .,t n fl•n~•• 1-<elJt n . Aclt tr""lt 'I Nlc111•~ Oflt.. c 8e1ll l 1•r¥ T111. J 0 '11•1•11 Ovk• of E1t•10~. l Ot uH,,.. l•n1!11r Mli.. J loe111 lMlltO 1t•CI -011f "'l!t T•G! C•1IMln1. All ••••· "u•JI 12,100. fop ct1i"''"' 11•1<1 l•.m. DIJ1Cl'I Sl~to•I, (, Melt JO'J~ Dty,11111 C11c11. G G1l1r60 3~ So1c, 11:. McC ll.,..1111 ~o T1tr~I. M. Jontl 3000 Ht l!I N't1ll, G, $lv111•1r. 3':0 loc~ln 1Ct¥. J, T\'IOd .)OCO Eltlt loontv, J, Ml!ltr 11(0 Nitl>I WarcJ'O, J, MtGrtoor .000 'OUITH ""'" -011t ,..,1, Pict Ct1IMln9. C•l·Drtd ,,,,~rrf'd •n •Otl. "~"t 11.•oc Tt• clt lrn in; 1rlc1 t<l.JIJ, T~ l t r,.I H!M11t. Ptnsivt IC Pllt M. 0. Mt YD<llJ 1lOO • Sne1t u11, J. Whflt •ll lJl.IO ClmMy, J Mlllt r 1100 St ndlt 511111 , IC, Tltflt r aoo Gl~t•• M1r1t . D. IC1rmt lfr OOG F•ttrn1n'1 Drt1m, G. Helt 35CO ••clllc Cflltl. G. Slvrullr. 1375 \t lov.td L1av, 1. ltl'IO<JJll •l'OO "'"™ ""c• -'"' "'"' ~l(t. Ct1lrnln1. All 1111. •11r1e u .200 fop clt lrnl'I• 1rltt M.000 Tiit •e.d 1nd lr•tk 1 <v<lt wo•ld m11111!nt. IC VI G. I . Wln1tt 5000 "ollv Jln1. M. H••orr ~o Cov1ln A11n. G. Hett .acio WI• Htrb. I . l !1ckm1n 5000 T T Piiie, G. lt,.,burt JOOO l(lmpt m. F. Htydt n 4(IOO .And¥'1 Mt rc, M. Grtn•t• 3000 Diiiy 01vj1, £. Wllttlt• 5000 llXTH I.I.Cl' -Ont "'lit l'1ct . Cl1lmln1. I ll 11•1 •u•se ll . .a!I. loo Clt lmlno orlce 11.IOl'I Fleur O'l mour, J • .o.. fl~n11011 A!ltf , I/. "'0!1 Ml....MIJ'lltrltt, E. Whit.I~• I V P, J Mtl tt•O• Y'1r1ity SI'""· O • .t.ckt•mtn llllO II At1lo1, 0 . Mt vot:kl Li ii¥ Abtdlol, l . LttOl1f Gri nd l roo••· J . Volll•o Tht fla,,tl H11t11t. ""' &J'O "" ... ... "'' , .. "" SIElllNTH It.I.CE -Ont m,lt. l •o1. All f gu , 11on-winnt • 11.000 !I•\! 111on~~ JIN;t Mtrcll 10. J>loo ell9lblt I ll llfl !O bt t lt !Mtll lo• 117.000. lCO·!J. Puri• l•.llOO. Tiit lent e''"' Eltlll nM Club. St•• l 1111 H1nevtt, J . O'llrltll !.""'"'' SOii, A, Cr1i1 Jonn• Jenn, E, Wllttlff Tnt l, II. Wlllll"ll s~M'"'' J. 1-11ck11r Ot1•r1 Stir, J. Ot nnis lltbtl Ht~•!. J. Mllltr T1roort Ptlt. T. lltTthtorll The 8trrtl Hou1t. """ l'IGHTH ltACf -Ont M•lf. Ptte. Cl1!mln9. AH 11111 "ur~ SS.JOO. Too t ltlmlno •'ltt U l,!oCNI. Men!tnl. J. 0 '8rlt n Glowl~g. J. A. flennett 81v Adlo1. A. Wll!lam1 Owvt• Htnovt•. J . Otnn•' ll~tr ol Gold. L. l.1cc1!t Cfl lt f A:td, J. 110111ro c11~...::• e u!lt •. A. J. 0 11111111 llw ll~rrtl Hou11. 1$,llO(t U.IOO 11.400 11.00G """' ..... 1 J,O(IO NINlM ••elf -Ont mllt. Pict All 1011 the! htvt 11tr!tod ! o• mere ''"'t i •n lt7? """ t r• non·wln~tr Of SJ,OOC In ttn fCD·ll. Puri• l},IOO. 5"llrh .t.t1n1, J. w11111m1 A""V'I l!t1I. M. G••nlt r Pr l11 l lme. J. O'Brltn P1r~•r1 Clloltt . 0 . Cronk T1m11n Jo\'f, G. Ktln\t it • co..,t t Tent . "· H1¥d111 (nlo "oc:lnt y, C. 8oYd (Or>\o Htnover, J. Miiier Area JCs In SoCal Spikefest Golden West College'& Steve Lassegard and Terry Parkinson and Orange Coast's Mark Turner head the area track and field stars co m· peling in Wednesday's Southern California junior col- lege prelims at Citrus College in Az usa. f ield evenl8 are scheduled to begin at l:JO with the first running event due to 1Hart al 2:30. The finals will be held May 20 . Lassegard won the mlle run in last week 's Southern California Conference me et . clocking .f: 15 .5. Parkinson nab. - bed the pole vault for the Rustlers (1 4-0,, Turner was OCC's lone win- ner in the South Coast meet Saturday, capturing the discus ( 146-1 ), Golden \Vest has 13 entrants in the meet \\'hile Orange Coasl and Saddleback are sending five each . AltfA ENllt l!S Orll>lt C~11 OiKUI -Mtrk Turner; Jt vtlin lttnoy Ct n!rt ll. Alvin Wl\1111 Pole \lt Ulr -01rrtl AltN1111t; Miit rllty 16111 llt n No tt , Otrtl llood, JOlln ltistll, Mllr.t lleffint J Stddlt-.tck 01KUI -M!11t BKkt r; $lier PY! - ll lcllt •ll KtYlt r• Pot1 \OIUI! -Biii 5PrDl.ll, 8t"Y ltwocd: 110 rtlt y flllck Gtdde1. Jonn Mt ckty. ltltll Cordtry, Mlk4 .J1ck1on l. Ooldtn Wt1t ~<0 -Pn1I M111, Wt l! A~l t•m•n, Milt -Slt vt l 111eo1r11; lllt M1rtl<1e1, ee11 ll•itknt•1 ~ r1J1y • .,..11, r111v1 '"'H-mllt -Dt\01 Lixkrntn. lo119 fumo -1t1v H1rrl1; l'Olt 1111111 - Tt••Y l'1rkln1on. Crt lll Nemur11 HJ- Mtl Pl1U, Htrrl1. Con~idering the alten lion highway safety is altracting in the .Nalder era, we are likely to see more of this type of law rather :lhan less in the fu ture. How the helmet bill cleared commil tee :and headed toward the floor tor passa,i;e is ind icative of how :many of the ''protect tW consumer from his o"·n folly" la"'S :may fare. , ;: , There are helmet lawS in severa l sla les. Stati~tic1 presen led :bY the CHP 1how that..gtaLes with helmet la\vs have fewer motor· :cycle accident fatalities than slates that don't have helmet la"'S. Alamitos Race Results So why s~ould an yone object IJl a helmet la w? A parade of "witnesses. led by Russ Sanford.' the lobbyist for motorcycle rid· ers. raised a num ber or safety objections to helmet!. 1) They restrict hearine;. 2) They restrict visibility. . J l Head injuries are a,'!gravated by having lo remove a heJ. met from an accident victim . 4) Helmets occasionally cause spinal and neck in1uries dur· ing severe accident~. 51 Poor auto mobile driving habi ts. such as illegal left turns, ea.use most of the serious motorcycle vs. car accidl"nts. * * * The mnsl imporlRnl artument again1t mandatory use of be:l- ~ets on the. h!Jhw1~11, frnm the motorcyrllng 1dvocate1' vlet11·- point, wa.!i the denial of their freedom of cbol<"e In the matter. Several wltne,ses pnlnted out that It Is mandatory for seat belts l.G be Installed in new automoblle1. but nfl law forces 1 drlv. er or his pa1!1engers ta use lhe belts. Requiring a aarety helmet ""as depicted as a disrriminatory measure, Inasmuch as more motorist~ than motorcycle riders die of head Injuries each year. and the bll l dnes not require occuoants nf aulomobllt5 to wear helmets. One wUne8"S derl11red : •·Gentlem1n. If ynu were tn appl.v this blU tll automobile drlrers. your wive~ wouldn 't It! ~·nu pass it." On,. <'11mmlttee member assured pa8"1a,1te \\'ben be asked Sanford \\'bether or not he "'·ears a he lmet when rifling on tbe street. •nd tht lohbylst rtpl led: "Yes, and I dnn't let my childrt'.O out of the drivc"'·ay unless they \\·ear a helmet." * * * The la"'111akers missPd the poi nt. lh;.il, opponents of a manda- tory helmet ta1v tried IJl mi'lke -!hilt !hP worth of a safe ty hel· me t is not yet fully known and tha t the law ma y infringe wrong- ,ully nn personal liberties .• All the legislators rould commPnl :thou! when \'Ofing for passage of the bill \\'AS that !he Nn. I man opposing ii person-1 ally pre:fers \veering a helmet. Their re<isoning apparenlly was that if San ford think~ \\•earing A hplmet ir; 11 safely measure. then it shouldn't be too terrible a h1w to pa.'\s. The bill is currently before the Ass mbly \V11ys ;.ind ?o.1eans I Commitlte. "·here H is expected tri 1Zet Anolher favorable vcitri:. Is it progress in !ht \\'Ar on hi,1!hw11~· death~? Is ii another ero sion of personal freedom? Or is it both? DAVE ROSS PONTIA C'S [XClUSIVE NEW CAR • L11 Al1mlr111 R11111t1 ' l'IR1T ltAt a -Ont milt. "''' Fer mt •1t~ J·Vtlr·olll1 •~II undt•. "ur~ 11,600. l'or1v TMl1vt 1 fO 'lrlt nl J.40 J 411 J,olO S•~llli\11 (l•lltYl 3 ?0 J,l'O lO•d fl ron1e !Cobhl ~.00 Tlmt -J.Oil l /5. Al•n rtcfd -IClwl trnlltr, Ht •m'1 fllrr¥. Vl il1nl'1 Httrl, J l rntlWI Y'I M~•c. 5~""' l'~vo•. 12 l •t clt O·l'trl"f Tlllt \011 111d .. Stn1Ul~tl, ••" l lt.ff. SICONO II.I.Cl -Ont mitt . Pt<•· Cl1Jm.n1. Cl1lmln1 prlt f 11.000. l'ur11 11100 Ol1m 1n1t Pllil lltCoi~)l.ltl ,,10 l.tD G. G. P1•kH (0t tCMt rl 4 «I 1.l'O Ot rk Sun1t1 ~McGr"orl J.40 Tl"'• -1:0il JI!. Ah{! •teed -Mlehh Stetcll. C1•dln11 Ht novtr, """¥'1 lrt~f. Oi1nevl1nd, !I Ot Cfl1ml~t. 'TWl ltD ltACt: -Ont rn+le P•t r. (111.,..1111. Ct1!mln1 11rit t SHOO. Alt 1911. l'u,_t SlOXI. Wend ••l ul S o e t1 !0 1.arnerl 1t 00 9.l'O l.20 l u<<tH 'l'erk (F•oo!l •.60 ).~ (I K l llt ("It/ fJOl'lt l ) ,,«) Tlmt -J:DJ J/5, lloo rt ctd -N«k1wt ml'U1 !ov. H11lt 0 1kwOoc:1. Mot-int Orttm, Wfltt rl'I R•ldt•. Coler Cll1n91. ~OUltlH It.I.Cl -Ont milt . lhe Ma~n 0 11 (~, Fulll •IOn, Pict. Cll l"'• 1~1. Clt lmlnt orlc~ SHOii. All11r1. "II"' IJOOO C<>11nty Ou1che11 fle1!1l 7.00 J 40 J.60 H1I Storm !8c•lll 1 10 J.IO F lt1~¥ Skv ITG<l!ll '10 Time -)·OI J ! Alsn r1c•d -Ce"'" See•!. c.it" N.f l'f•1T. Tht G•een Gltnf, Jordl n lodlm, Untl• 5rnu!lq• ~ Fl,TM It.I.Cl .. o~· milt. llit El (~m1no 11111 Mt •dl Gr11 Pit t. Cl1lrn- ln, Tru> c!1imlnt 11rlt 1 13150. loll 1111. Pu••r 1noo. Mt tr oe!or IMt rkwt lf) li.<O 7.40 '·:to 8retfle•·•n·l.1w IOewil!l Gene Ttllv (Wl1111tJ '!"'• -''°' JtJ . J.llO J.00 ·~ .t.110 rited -lene l lH T t it. c111ee ll1rrnln, J•rrv wn..,,., Wtl J11d¥ o .. \Otl1t1C Kid. ltXTH lt.t.CI -One molt . Trot. c11 r.,..1n1 .t.11 1111. "ur11 Sl6iltl. Our Rett r IL1Cesl1) l .IO 3.10 J.l(J l(tUv'• Mi ll l 01ul""'' S.l'O 3 • ., HI f mpl•• (Otnnlt! 1.IO Time -J:O. JI!. Al.a •tct d -Lumber Gtl!on, SwHt Te Meet, lndl11 Vt l. Prlntt Ki m, ,;t~ythM Q11k t . Scru c11111 -T••l><H'! Mui. H l:•c!• (~Clvr lt191P •Ml 1·11'tflV'I MllU t•ld 146.M. SallfNlM ltACIE -One mdt . Ptt t. Cl1lrnln•. AU 1111. "11r~1 fj(l(l(t, Good l(ln• (Lt Co,Ttl u . .a 7.IO 4,60 A•r S1u11e11• 1w11111rrn> J.IO 1.00 Tommv Wobfl (MtGrtoerl J.1(1 TIMI -1.G3 415 AllO r1t td -Ju11111t"!l1I. •. 01rt1, Luck Du/!MI•. llriceln l t nd l reok. ltllt Olv..,plt No •trt tcht1. l!IOHTH I.I.Cl! -On1 m ilt , P t ct. c1a1,.,1n9 . .1.11 1at1 PufSt 16!0l'I. C1tMum1 C~Tt! tO'l tit nU.IO 3 00 16.l l uddv Time IWl•ll1m1I 1 IO l .•O Surf I CWl•d fWHll 1rn1! 3.<IC Tirnt -l .Ool. Al.a rtctcl -lo ee q1n91r, s •t ld Dl1rno"d' 3cerclltr Wtvt , l 1yl~r C•tt k. NINTH It.I.CE -0111 .... 1,, Pace ccn11111ened /CO·'l All 191!1. PurJt l l.600. luck¥ Je/'ln II. ff1U r¥1 }.}O J.00 l .olO Miss Ou<i<1llo IO'llrlt "I J 60 J.2n lllt\Ol dt 11111 !Lt Co1tt / J.llO Tl"'e -J.05 l \. Also ,;t1c1d-l!rn C111!1c1. f ron ~rell, Jt velcn Moll~wk . 8•8dl l !tt"rnoen. Ct Plll1I Ill, Ne Sc•11<1•"'· •f l11tll, ll·Lll<l:k1 Jel!ll V., llld l- Ml11 Ol/itk11t•I. ptld I.ff.JO: adidas NEW SHIPMENT- JUST ARRIVED! PLENTY OF SIZES ... CHI LOREN'S SIZES TOOi Fishing Grea4 l(eepers Slow Fishing is greal but catch· able--size keepers are on the slow side according to Orange Coast area sportfis hing land- ing operators but all four are oPilmislic abo ut the coming summer run along the Pacific shoreline. ''F'ishing Is g r e a t b u I ca tching them is ' hltle slow." repons a spoke..sman for Art 's Landing in t\ewport. "We still ha\'en't g o t anything loo exciting to report but conditions look good for a good run this s u m me r , ' ' Davey's Locker indicates. "We've had Jots of action but keepers are a little on the slow side," Dana Wharf of· flclala say. Optimism for the futW'e con- tinues ll Huntington Brach Pier "'here: the r..1cCull 1h brothers operate. The full summer schedule will begin Saturday "'ilh h111f-day boats at 8 and l and the '"'ilight special at 5:30 daily. "There are plenty of fish In the waler but they don't seem qulte ready to bite," Arrs Landing says. "The water 1emperature cooled, 1 bit over the weekend but should come back up shortly.'' Art 's is taking primarily bottom fish and some bass. Da vey's Locker reports a few scattered b arra cud a STEEL AGAINST POLYSTEEL Here'• th• Cualom Power Cuthlon Pol,.IMI Ure you've Men on TV, lnltdMW:t.againal dOzenl Of Yicfoul hardened-steel drill bib: and the GO:Od)w Pot)"lteef tire won! I tkeepe.r sl are be ing taken along wJth bass and rock fish and some halibut. The island speclal on · Y.'ttkends h· hooked into some \\ h1te s a bass but none of th e hsh ha e bttn landed yet. Dana \Vharf is tn its ne building with the No r t Orange County phone line no in operation (831 -18501 an manager Dan Han sen 1s o timist ic about the coming summer season. "Fishing's great," l al ways tell them . "But when they ask about the catch , I have !O tell the truth. A da y off and a chance to get out on the ocean Ls great though.'' CUSTOM POWER CUSHION TIRE Goodyear builds it with two bells of steel cord for long· lasting resistance to impact and penetnttion. [You wo uldn't run over steel drill bits the way we did here-bat the demonstration illustrates how tough the steel belts ,..ally are.) Then Goodyear makes the long mileage easy to take, with • a flexible polyester cord body to seal up the shocks. Hurry ••• Trade Today-start riding on Polystee/ tires. nn.wal --,.,.. Check ·-~ -·-rte. ll. T• ... A78-13 -$<7.95 Sl.86 your 878-14 6.4S-14 !<US $2.05 C78-14 6.95-14 $5U5 $2.15 • E78-14 7JS-14 $55.95 $2.•1 size F78-14 7.75-14 $57.J5 $2.54 check G78-14 8.2S.14 $59.J5 $3.JO H78-14 8.55-14 $6J.J5 $2.74 your F78-15 7.75-15 $51.95 $2.62 G78-15 8.2S-15 $!0.95 $2.80 • H7S.15 8.55-15 $14.95 $3.47 price J 7S.15 &.85-15 saus $3 23 L78-15 9.1~15 S7•.t5 $3."6 Deep Sea Fish Report DANA WHAfl' -tt t f!l lt rt· n 11111111111. 1 b1r.1euc.1. t lltllfWI, 41 "''c~t••f NfWl'ORf !Ari'' L•lldl"t 1 -• l nflltrl lll rl)(O end. I "'M bin . ID1¥tY'I LICktr) -•o 1n;1.,.. 10f ro« ced. /1 ,...c:11,1r11. S! ctllco blH. l btrrt(U~I Slol\I "1011:0 IJ)!ld SI. l tlldl,.,J -U .~,1.,1 J w11 •• ••• b111. !It tl hte btU CS1K'rltllhl111) -11 "'trl1r1· It •eek tod. 1 '~ t 1llco bin. " ""•ckt111 ~41fA01~1 COVI -13 "'l ltrl l l( 10(~ tad. II cow ({)d OC!ANSIDe -11 .tPll ll rt. IJ k1 I• bt•I, II •D<k Carl. tl!AL ll!ACM -'6 111911": '-'' rot~ co1. 14 11~d bill ltrt• -I) •o>qlt" 70 111•rtc11d1, I bl)nf!o. 2! k•I• bt ••· I lltl•l>Ut, , I rnetktr ... lO~O 1£•CH l~lt,..l11f ltlldl!lt) - ,, 1n11~r1 101 •lltk coc:I l l1lm011t P•erl -)t t ntl1•1: 11 11nd b111. UJ roxk toc:I 61••1 -It 1n11,r1: J bt r- r1c11d1. 1 ntllbut, 70 m1Ckt rt l. ,OllT HUaN!Mt: -1• 1n1ltfl: 2(11 rot'-: <!Id· l !lnq cad. 10 (ew ced MAl.tlU l'IElt -ll 1nt ltr1: .,, reek cllO. 11 ~tlibut, 1 cew cod • THEY COWi SAVE YllUR VACATIOllS NYLON CORD Rib Hi·Miler *251s· •251s· $ 45* 6.JOxlS J.00 JI~ 7.00X lli Also f!ls, panel, vans end piCk"'\lp&. 3 WAYS TO CHARGE • Our Own Ci 1 I CNcll 11'\M ·-C..,. .... ..__. 5 YEAR/50,000 MILE i WaRRanty ; •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• HAILLET-$14.95 ~---------------------~ !: YOUNG & LAN·E TIRE Co.:: 'W¢elilf8HOEB POI TM t•htl"IJ,!llf I COSTA MESA LAGUNA BEACH .&, 1596 NEWPORT BLVD. 482 OCEAN AVE. I s41.9313 494·6666 :W 1052,IRVINE e ,.._.614 1 ' WISTCL"' PLAZA • NEWPORT BEACH ·I THEODORE ROBINS FORD -2026 HARBOR BLVD •• COSTA MESA 642-0010"1 ----------------..Jlltl.--.. - - - - --- -- - - --- ----.. • .. .... 7;1t 1:00 / • ' I m ' ,, ' I bl I Ii Th • •• " I hi •I T 1ri .. .. u " jol ... lol "' uil '" ... "' ua 11:11~ TONIGHT'S TV IDGHLIGHTS CBS D 7:30 -Ca mpa ign '72. Th• CBS new s staff covers the Ne braska and \Vest Virginia prim- aries. KHJ D 7:30 -'"Saratoga Trunk." Gary Cooper and Ingrid Bergman are paired in this 1946 drama ~~ set in Ne\v Ol'lean s. • ; NBC D 8:30 -Junior Miss Pageant. Fifty sen ior \ i! high school girls compete for the title of America's ~ Junior. J\1iss. Ed ~TcMahon emcees and Anita Bryant ~ ·• is a s1>ecial guest. ABC 0 8:30 -"What's ' Nice Girt Like t ''ou ... ?" Brenda Vaccaro. Jack lVarden and ,. Roddy ~-IcDo\\1ell are am ong the stars in this re-·'· cent comedy. .. KTTV ID 12:00 -•·comrade X." Clark Gable and , 1 l-ledy Lamarr sttr in this romanti c drama from l940. ; ,,....,,,__,..,,...,,~~~..,..._-.,,,...,,,.,~~.:J · Tu•sday Evening MAY t l:!I 8 ;Junior ft'iss. P11e1nt: * Ed McM1hon MC: An~• Bryant. Presented by lll"etk, Kodak, Kratt O !tif:m!IHCWI A•1ric1'1 Coainty Playho11ses Witi SI~ Irvine~ Theater Cops 3 Tourney Awards Led once again by the Irvine Co1nmunity Theater, r our Orange COunty theater group!'! captured six awards in the 13th aru1ual Southern California Tourna1nent of One· act Plays held over the weekend in Riverside. The Irvine players collected three awards, sharing the spotlight with c o m m u n 11 y theaters fro1n Pomona and Colton, \\'hile the lluntinglon Beach Playhouse. the Gu ild Players of Santa Ana and the Jck-llyde Players of Costa Mesa each captured one troph y. ICT 's rollicking Irish farce, /R.l o ••A Pound on Dt1nand"' by Sean O'Casey, was voted best con1edy or th~ three-da y feslival -tht third thne in as n1any outings that Irvine has taken top honor s in 1t.~ category. The playlet was directed bv Richard Dow. who also staged the first two win- ners, ''Ho1-11 Ta 11 is Tos- canini ?" in 1970 11nd "Too Late'" in 1971, • Two individual a"•ard$ for New Plav " Fills Void On Video 6y CYNTHIA LO\\'lt\' NE\V YORK ~·AP) Original drama. particularly the drama of ideas. has become in the past fe\V seasons just about the rarest sigh t on teJeivi sio n . ''Particular ~1en," the first of a series on the Public Broad· casting stations. reminded us l\1onday night or the void. excellence In acling "'<"re pre~ented to Aaron ~~lelchcr and Joanne \Volcott from the Irvine cast. Also winning excellenct in acting ·a"'ards \Vere Ka~eryn Offill in the l-lunlington Beach Playhouse's production of "Th is \'lay to Heaven" and C hr i s ti n a Carden in "Pygmalion," presented by the Guild Players of Santa Ana. ' . , .. ! t(-1" .. , 'I ·~ ~ I , 'fllOlAINrUT , ·. Third Year Fete Slated For Pla ye rs An ou111anding achievement award was vottd to Costa l\tesa's Jek·Hydt Player:J f~r their origina l play, ''It Coul'~ Happen ," written and directed by Dohn Shaw. Capturing !hr top prize of the evening, the judges' trophy for overall excellence, was the Valley Con1munity Theater for its comedy •;1·m fltrbert'' from Robert Anderson's "You Know I Can't Hear You \Vhen the \\'ater's Running." Both actor.s in the a how, Ed \Vaterhouse and Jim Gardne r 1who pla yed an old \\'Oman !. wo11 e11:cellence In acting 111vard:1. The Colton Little Theater aliiO took three awards for its cuttinJ of "You're 1 Good l\liin, Charlie Bro,vn ,'1 voted beJl excerpt of the tourna- ment. Excellenct In acting troph ies \\'ent to ~larllef' 'Never Too Late' Orake, who played Lucy , and J im Slaughter as Snoopy. Al:t0 competing in t he Riverside tournament were 1 ht Santa Ana Community Players, the Satellite Player~ or Redofl4o Beach and the AP" prenda Players or San Pedro . The tournament was staged Friday. Saturday and Sunday evenings. with awards preselt" tation.s following the final pro- duction , at the Rivuslde Com· munity Playhouse. New Mesa Theater Opens By TOM TITUS Cll'tti• 0•11~ P'llll ~·" H 1nust take ner ves or iron lo start a ne\V con1n1un ity theater group from sr ratrh in the mid st of an area already \veil recog nized as the hotbed of local thespic talent . but this is what Costa Mesa·s l<1 test theatrical organization . !hr Hamsters, appearii: to bt doing. "Nl)ll!lt TOO l.ATI'" • A romt dV 1>y $umner.,.,r111ur Lo>no.- ,1 .. .,.;1•(! by Gtr•ld Mt ve,., 1e! •no llgMll'g DY Jim Mtrsl>btn~. prtlf~I•<! l>V 11\p Htm't~r1 Frld1y1 and St ill" <l•y U I o'cf(IO:~ t nd 5undt v ~• 1 o'~lock U Int Jlomont SchOGI 1ucUIO•• lum, 70ll Pn,,.,ont ,.,v,., Coot1 Mt\I , Rt•trvu,on~ S•C·IOll TNI CAST HtrtU Ltmb~tl ElllO• L11111>1t1 Cl>trtlt K1l1 M1yor Crt n• Gr1c1 l\1mtw0tio1> Or. l(lmn•o"!lh Mr Foley JllM1crm•n (n11(~ Kr'Jio• Jt nttt HtlN .• lllch1r111 l•rrl•tr S1>eu•v Jol'tn1t0<> Mt rlt LtwlJlon Bob Kt hO• ~Mrlty Ol>o" sn1r1 Bur~·· C•tl Ol•on llotf TOtlbU Ray Cl'tt oo•ll Olson. also double cast, Is rr. fective as the prospective ne1\· 1na1 na'S: best fr iend. ,1·hi1r t:arl Ol son is satisfactory 1 .ot ht•r doclor husband. Roh ·rouby excels in a bit rolr: a ~ lht carpenl er. and Ray Chap- l)('JI is believablt as a policeman. &:oo 11.00 D 0 !ii 1!!1 "'" II Ta. Iii Valier Ju1~Milt.Pull_iij (d McM_!hon•'ia~"-r.;.;;::;:;::;;;;;;;;:;;,,,,,,.=~~ emctt 1nd Mitt Bryant Is spe ;ii Loring Mandel's two-hour drama seemed to be a delayed emollonaf rea"Ction to the hor· ror of atoniic power, the dilemma or the wartime scien- tists v.•ho created it and the almost hyste rical fear of coin· munism during the late 1940s. It \\'as the story of an in- trospective, pipe-puffing scien· list. whose personal life was as mixed up as were his emo· !ions about th e usr of the killer-bomb he helped create. I\ birthday "'iii be gi\•en by lhe Ana-f\todjeska Players \Vednesday, celebrating their third year of existence as a co mmunity theater in Orange County. The overall dearth or r~ .. perience, both onstage and directorially. is painf4ll y f'\'i· dent in the 11amsters' llj)t!n in~ production. but tht group has "'is tly chosen a sc ript \1•hich can mask many a rlaY.', Sumner Arthur L o n g ' s familiar but "'ell-\vrillen com- edy "Never Too Late.'" Apparently rraching for a I0\1·- key approach to counter her husband's fi re and brims1 one. she succeeds only in slowing to a cra\\•I and taking the pace or the sho"' v.•ilh her. \Vhat this budding Col\ll1 l\1csa group needs. quit,. critically. is a helping hand frorn so1ne or lhe more ex· j)('rienced RCtor s and directors in the Rrea . Ne\\' conlmunity thc.•aters are ahvay!'! \\"rlcome, bu1 !ht llan1slers are: playing In fast t'Ompany and pale by LOrnparison. 0 (IJ WiN WNll Wist 1D llif n""""' 11 Or•• tf M1~ni1 ,.,,,., ICEI" 4IHtilll •n (611') c111britr ittms, ce l1btity 1uctionttr!, ind tllouwnds of i:rut b1111lns ,,. lea· . lured an this lour1h nlchf: or KCET's fund ·r1isln1111Ct!an. Yilwtr! bid by dit lina: (Z13) 660·2450. Ont ol to 1 nia:lll's mti01 Items ia t vinhte 1941 Cadi!ltc. flJ Htticiert 34 m1t11rt le,ort ~ M1JMr1J ltfD Cii.) T1 le bnelllKfl (52) Tllf91 sttops •:JO D MIWl1: <C) (IO) "'•hiti11r 111 the lt111ty" P1rt IJ (drt) '62-M1rlo11 8nn0o, TreYOr Howard. Rlchtrd Htr· 1is. Huth C1illith, T1rit1. (() tlS Nns W1Uer C1on~11e !iQ! N1tlenrl .. lflltllic: ''Yank et Sails Acron Europ1 .. m Alld, 1nn;ui Sh•• t1J Ntnr 1N thl Ptaltsior (1]') ....... , iDTNllllrt ~·,... Acin C!) O~lln Cantl (HI C111ci1n7 G) Yldlril Jt-Siew ,,,,_, cuest 11 50 senlot hlch school c!rls comptle f0t the title of America's Junior Miss or 19J.Z tnd I $10,000 sehol111hlp 1w1rd. 0 (}) (I) l!!I ""• of "° W.W. (C) (90) "Miit's 1 Nici lift Ub ,,. ••• !"' (R) (com) '71-111ent11 Vac~aro, Jae~ Warden, Roddy Mt· OowaU, .» Mn• Worley, Edmond O'Brien, Vincent P1ice. fl) lttllin' 1n lht ltiYtr m Mtrv Criflin SPlow Gue~ts: Ott Zenos, Poll~ lle1fen, JOI J.1cGu1n· nes5, .loin (luia:le,, Jot Flynn. 01l Tiit Mwattl m Alttriai• Eat'lfflr 1111......, ..... 9:00 II Ktwaif fM·O (R) MtCltltlt s11rthts for 1n tc.oloO f•nttic whos1 pnnb 1r1 harm!eu unlil h1 thre1tens th1 lives of tMse he feels '" th• c1us1 or th• isl1nd's pollu· 11on. (U ScNJ Mitclllll Spttial NillCJ Y/i!son 1uests. fD KC£T Audiln (cont. to 12AM) fE) I.a Crilde 1111 Crild1 01 TM Vi1finl111 m '• .. A1111e1111C•4 1:31 0 m JaMI CanMr 11 JIKh1l1 {R) D SlctM LMk u111- i:ooa rn am-D""'"""' f{) turtl 1r Co11Mt111nct' (jj} IJmlm Wildll'llltt tf Ult Fu· ture A wisit to tht San Ditto Wild An!1111! P1rk. l}]Dnpet CJ wur. Mr u111r Gii LM LIC:J Ill I lfUll ti JM11ni1 llJ) [lhlCltilll I NltiM UlJ kCET Aldtt (cont lo J2AM) fl) U111 l'llpril 11 ti C.111in1 @Kid T1lk 7;JO IJ {)) C.111paiui '11. Covtr111 cl • tilt N1b11sk1 1nd Wtst Vir1inl1 pri· (ii) II.a: Jtum1I @EL• hll (52) Htl,_., P11k h tln1 IO:OG 1J (j) c..-(R) Cannon t1ke3 on tilt job of htlpina: 1 man becom• lost, thin lritt lo find the rr.1n after th• client att!mpts to murdtr him. UIDN• .. 0 (I) Ci) 6' Mtrcw WtlbJ, M.D. (R) "A Yello.,,, Bird" G Mttie: (2hr) "l'A Sit Ytu in Mr mtrits. D;q11$" (bio) '52 -Daris Oay. 0 m PIMtml (R) "Child"" Ht!s, Cl Draprt charted with robbtlJ i nd murde1, @ P11)'htu11 Nt• Te1' "lht 40s: bretks jail lo 1sup1 e tvnch mcb. rirticutar Men" Ytph1t Kotto 111erts. fC ll'C!T Aucliea (cont. lo J2M1 ) 8 M"6r. (C) (2lr) "'Wtr ti tM E?i) fdtiwf Mt1itan1 lltr1illtllu" (sti·li) '70-Russ Tim· (52) U L.,1nd1 dt lefemrt bl~n. from olrl of tht se1 uimes • ISO· loot crt1!111t bent tn l!t!hllC· 10:30 0 M111ty NtY (R) '"Th• Visltot' lion. "'\ 1J Cttflt Pullla11'1 T1lk Itek 0 (I)({) m Tiii Mid Squid (R) O.Ql Tilt lollfit:IHI " ••. And 1 l itt le ChUd Shill Bleed II) 1111 Ccshy Show Thtm" Milton ll et!t pe3ts 1s Un;::e fD LI S.Unlt.t lloba. I lV clawn whose lill Is en· a;, C.n II the Wtst , d1na:e1td. Att1r he t.oll1pu1 Qn um· 9 film: "o\llltriun C~er1illt in !ht er• when 1 b1lloon explodes in hi! flillippints" fact, !hi squad movt• in to proltcl (J2) Cancitncit C1lpeblt him. Kt1 nan Wynn 1nd Henry Jones tl:OO 1J (j) Ill Newt also tuts!. 0 ®) m Nin g -Mltliffl $ Ml'llt: (211r) .,S.ralll* g Ont S1t11 1tyt14 TMI~ (dfl) '45-Guy Cooper, In· 00 M1ull•I Dil1H crid ll1r1m1n. A beautiful woman fJ Cl)&> lhws with 1 Creol1 past returns lo Ntw ID Trutfl ., C..~utnw Orle1n1 to lord it O'ltr tht 11pJtr ID Mewil: "Slltrt llrh Dln't T11•" crllSI hypocrites whose bltOllJ n· {mys) '41 -Vlrflnl1 Mtyo. suited in her txilt lo Pt ris. m Kct1' Auctlol (cont'd.) Qj ! tp11:1!Li Alric.I Par! II ol fOlll (52) NHilllltll ~~Ills on Mric:1. GrtlOIJ Ptck n1r· ll:JO fJ Cl) CU lilt Mewit: (C} "Mistti ID ~·1 HerNs lldil•illl" (•Ll_'P) '" -Jamn ID Dflpt Gtrnu, K1tll1 nnt Ross. (J.))Th• fDnJtllt s.11 O ®.l m ~nrtr c111111 FrOll llurbtnk. C.111. OJ llttt Ca•plMM g Mtwh: "'Tiii llfft. Kt,.. (mys) €S Clllsejert C...11111 'J~tor11 Rift, [dw1rd Arnold. (D Tl 11 An111u11td 0 (]) ({) r:8 llcl C.Wltl Sdltd· (52) M~•: (2hr) "Dlni:tr11J1" (dr1) 11!ed 1uesls: Authot Rot:tr Kihn. Joi 'JS-Betti Davis. Fr1nchot lane. II Itek. Cttl Erskin• ind Clem Ubi ot. m Te ftlt tt11 Trutlr 1:0011 lltn Ct•pbeU (R) Rcbtrt Gaultl . ., , join Campbe ll for 1 medley of son11 12:00 fJ Mivii : "War ffullt (drl) 6Z -. s 1111 Jolin SaKon, ftabtrt Redfo1d, wntten by Lerner t nd lowt " • II Mtvl "Cl lit l" ( ) '40 Loli f1 l1n1 1nd Dom Deluis• tetm --Cl • 6•01 •"', Lama ram In 1 cotnedJ sktlth tbolrl ll~1dwty tr 1 e, • Y "" trl!Jc who ciY11 his wile's romtnllc 1:00 rn 0 D (IJ Qi JINS ' 1bi!ili" 1 IOusy review. 00 I lrl• tf Jt•ftlt ID 1141 '"""' -18 Din. ff91t Shw C:111Sl1: The (vttly l tothtrs. Clrl Btll1nlln1. '" Sheil• Cr1h1m. Dic:t frtnds, lte I Aflhuf. • ID 1W Qdloel (conl. lo 12AM) .. IE) Lt c.. Jlllpllt cs"""' ' Wednesday ~ DXYTIME MOVIES ... • .,..., MJ LM" (drt) '41 - l Cl1udflf1 Colblr't, Don Amech1. "'11 Q (CJ "M_, t•-(1") w· '3~6nndon ft, Wildt, Ltt M11'M l tJO 8 -tu _,.. !'1!'1 ·oo ---HtNJ WilcuU. C.rolt llndis. f t:JO 8 Mtwil: "Sl111pter 11 Tt11th Avt· ••" (dr1) 'SI -ltichtrd £tin, Jll't S!er1ltl(. Wt1ttr M1lthllt1. GJ Afl·Ni&-M Sllow: "Klti TtlllMM ....... "C'1 "I>-" -111tr SkJ" J:OO 8 MftM: "lnt 5antt ti Ult A111- rt11" ftdV) ·s~Oon T1ylor, • ' ~· ~"' --~;~ ,;-\1,., .. n•••O "StNTINAlS Of SllENC(" ~ •1U1 $OIJT" Of $AN Ol/:G(l IWI. Exclusive Engagement J"~•ll•oq~.H,.,y"f,, y:no T1i 1l1 Von De11ere l'l Al•o -l.11<1 Moncil• '" "THI STlllLI CUCKOO" ALTER MATTHAU "KOTCH" IN YHC Wl>ITf'llN"Yll .. C"""'" Ca·•2 __ ,, •• __ •• 11 .-.... ......... -. ._ .......... _ Wllttlfl S A<AllMT AWAlll 1111 PK JVll • A(TOl • DllllCTOl GCNE HACKMAN 20nt ClHTlJl'l''.f(])( PfllSOOS TIE FRENCH l!!J -COmcTION ':"~ "'ti "HOSPITAL'' ••• ,__All• "MilT 0\111• e,, KCITI" The play n1ade its point ear· ly and then \va nd ered on for much too long, heapin g fl ashback u po n nashback. caricature upon caricature in confusing abundance. The ac· ting however . was great. Stacy Kea~h wa s utterly convincing as the remote and idealistic physicist confronted \vith an inquiry into his s e c u r i t y clearance. During the past three years the player!I have presented 11 s ho ws totaling 39 performances, as "'ell as a \1·orks hop program and specia l appearances al lhl' f'a ll Ari Vestival. Ca r r o u s e I of Anahc.i1n. and for various service o r g a n i z a t i on s throughout the comn1unity. The general -men1bership rneeting \1·ill be held at Gibbs llall. Sainl ~l ic hael's Episcopal Church, 311 \Vest South Street (nea r Lemon ) in Anaheim at 7:30 p.m. and 'is open to members and anyone intere sted in c o m m u n i l y theat er. Ne\\' offi cers to be installed are Richard Olmstead, presi· dent : Patsy L. Ray . £irst vice president ; Larry Bishop. sr- cond vice president : Karyl {;onzales, third vice president : <;ary Garrell. fourth vice president : Alicia Pr i c e , secretary and" Laurie Lan1berl, treasurer. Brue• Brown's "ON ANY SUNDAY" ALSO UTnf MUSS AnD llG HALSY ---CtNEDOME 20 ... ~.::;.c::--~ --CINEOOME21 ·= ---__ --;,., STADIUM "/ ' ... ..-:i::ll:'.!lr.Jli... -:",J9 -----.-. $TADIUM ·2 •.•· .. ~""lr-.:~ ----If") $TAOIUM '3 ' .--..!:l. ...,.'l::T.~---.. • U.T ..... Vignettes from the musical comedy and adult acti ng \1•orkshops "'ill be presented . Hayes Role HOLLYWOOD IUPll Helen liayes n•ill star in "The Snoop Sisters," a television movie at Universal. V1nesla •Mll••v• G ...... J1dls.en "'MARY, OUll!lf CIJ' SCOTS'" "'WU THl!"RINO HIEIGHTI,. E•<h11iY1 Clr1"41<1 Ct11nty •H1rvecl S..11 Ent1911'Mnl "'""'"''" fer I Aca.""' Awar•t1 "J'IDDLER CIN THI! •OOJ'" Aclil1mr Aw1rd Wlnn1r J1nt J'trtell "KLUTE" 1111 11Y "SUMME• OJ' '4)" l•l Acl41my Awtnl Winne; "HOSJllTAL" ••• "SUNDAY I LCICIDY SUNOAY" Win111r ltf I Acadtmy AWtflh "Thi "•end! (11111KllH" 1111 '" "Vlftli.hlnt J11lrlt"' 1111 "OlllTY HAllllY" • "SICIN GAMI!" • "DIAMONDS ARE This comic glimpsC' of im- pen d ing middle -aged parenthood can strike ~ responsive chord in its au· dience no matter ho11• lnrking the interpretat ion. A11d. it mu st be said. !he Jla1nstrrs' staging of this ge m of a con1- edy does miss the target on a good many occasions. \\l hile some promising in· dividual contributions surr11ce often enough to keep the in- terest whetted. there is " static sort of emptiness abo ut Gerald ~leyers' d i re c t i o n v.·hich never alloY.'s the shn1v to ta ke full rein . f\'feyers ap- pears to ht reluctant to n1ove his actors unless absolute ly necessarv. and the overall level of ia leirit is not sufficien t to overcome th is drawbark. Chuck Kehoe. despite an uO- vioµs uneasiness Y.'ilh his line s. creates an interesting and properly blustering, tight- fisted character in his ro le ;:1.~ the prospective papa who iii: anyt hing but overjoyed at thr idea. \Vere he to put hi!I nervous energy to \vork as an excuse to pace abo ut the stage. he would be far more effective. but by standing and swa.ving for innumerable lines or dialogur he minimizes his impact. The performance or Janese Hefty as his newly pregnant wife is far less impressive. St•""' SW..,. Peltier SHOWTIMI: 7:00 Ill·"· C••tf•1•1t S•-'-Y ,,.,. 2:00 ,.,.. 5 ACADEMY t AWARDS ......... llST PICTUll l l SY ACTOI a llST DfllCTOl • Alte S..e114 het•1 JIAN 5AllN IL.I.IN DILON ·x. f &-UI" fll 1---All• 11Gl1111 Houte'' (R) FOREVER" COJlt ~--ANO ''Ztppelfn'' (OP ) "THE SICIL IAN CLAN" ... Turning in the f i n es I porlrn_\'al nf lhf' night is Shelley John~too as t h t forcibly d om r .~I i c " t t cf • 1lnughl<'r. Kale. i\-liss Johns!on ~ 11 h1• Is. strri ngely. double r il s11. is brighl , perk y and aninlated -Rnd i1he is one or !he re1\' performers w h 0 displays genuine singe reac- tion. Ri c hard Ba rt le tt 's performance as Kate'! huii- brind Charlie is well enough deli ncd. but he·too lapses into the ennui \\'hic h unrortiftrlalcly l'h;1r:1c1cri7.rs the production. Bflrtlr tl. tl ke Keh{)(', fail s to take rnouuh physicnl ad· I \'i\11l:1 ge or his lines, !iOme or l which nre pricelesi1. An. ex cellent account of 11 tninor role is given by Bob I Kehoe a!I the mayor. both in his first scene. delightfullyl needling his neii:chbor. and in his second . calling down !he wrath , of cil.v hall. Shirley Sa lly Slated llOLLYWOOO 1UPl 1 Sally Struthers. Gloria Bunker in television's "All In The Family" hit. will c0+sta r with Steve f\lcQueen and A I i l\'lacCraw in "The Geta~·ay." NOW THRU TUESDAY Omar Sharif In "DR. ZHIVAGO" plus. selected Three more performances nf "Never Too Late " will ~ gh•en this weekend , Frid;iy and SalurdRy at 8 o'clock and a 2 o·clock matinee Sunday. The group performs at the Pon1ona School auditorium, 205 1 Pomona Avt ., Costa 1\1esa. HELO OVER 'JA N( d •• -ca Ali• Ill "SUMMER OF '42" BARGAIN MATINEE Every Wednesday, I p.m. "" lt•f""hlMMI Alll1tts Sl.00 "'CABARET' IS GLITTERINGLY BRILLIANT. IT DESERVES TO BE A CLASSIC." -Wini/Id Bit-Mt, L.A-.i.£ ...... I See by T ooay' s Want Ads e TIUS \\1r:EK ONLY! .. \/akr Ille best oU!'r Ud1 11trk "nd you'll ha\'c a tltal on !hl!'I ·oo Corvrllt'. 11 '1' a t•!Ot beck wilh Ai\f/ r~1. ill·T.? 4-l'llPN'(f, k 4U OO:li, Ott>r1· items! '69 W . "27 ClO. llolley Edlebrock, TRW, magl'll • e T!UNK SMAU.. -Shellie pups tor Nit (toy tolllq). There ar~ 3 malei:, ·to "'Ct k11 old, AJ<C, 11hot .. Cht.mp qiJaU•>'· • • c ............ ,,, ... J ------~·~~~~~~~~~· (11,.·ro (l,1d , b Jol 0 '' · ) o1 "• " ,._ H" "1.1, , • I i \ 0 DAILY •tlOT .Liz's Son Rejec ts 'Things ' Jo~rom "'ire Servlct.s Michael Wlldinx, 19·ye;ir-old NOn ol fllrn stn.r Elizabeth Taylor. hall retreated to the top or a \Velsh n1ounta1n. llY,lng d iamonds are for lltver. ''I just don't dig all tho~e diamonds ar>d things." l'iSid Wilding. rtferring to hill step- father Richard Burlon 's habit of lavishing expensl\'1· bauble~ on ~1iss Taylur Wilding h11s takC'n hi,. "·1fc Beth and their hab.\ duui;:hter Leyla to live frugally wi!h a commune ln1nily in a four· bedroom 19th ceniury f51rm house high in !he desolate Cambrian ~1ountains of Wales. * * * Pre1ldenl NfXon wil l givt a IJl'I Tt1tplltlt1 LEGAi. NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE • LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE ,...., ,ICTITIOUS aUIOollll •1CTITIOUS •USIMISI ,ICTITIOUS tUSINllS 1un11011 COl.llT 0, TMI. "~' ITATIMllllT HAMI ITATfl!UHT HAMI STA'JIMINT ''""'" o .. ULIPOlllllA •o• ,.~ lellOWlM ,.,_ .,. dollltl """' t~lowll'ltl "''°"' •.• "°'"' '"' lollowl1111 "'-11 OOlrM 1>u11,..,., , ... c~i:..~~OAAM•• MJM.1 ••: 111.1 .. ;,:~o~s': FOii: H.Allt, ,..., WQtclltt -.a. 11.UIY'S lt.AGS. lOlt El C..l'rll .... C11ta tlLANO INYISTMl!NT COMl'ANY, Dr .. Sult• 105. N-1 lttcll. Cell!. ••·••, Ct llf, t1th 0 1011 "TO IMOW CAIJll ON A~ :W It" l t't fJrtlll. a..1ii.. llllt!ld, C.I· John It. wW:--..1r .• l»ll Cl'lttltl 'R";lit' E. Sl'llll, t l4 Ctrtl\f40 Or,. C•1t1 •l.ICAllON O" CM.I.NOi 0" NAMI. i!Ortllt. l"I., Tuillll. (•Ill. Miii, Cillf • .,.,. ti\ m. rri..ttt• ff Ille AJ>ollc1ll011 of ,_.,, 0.111111, lJ7 1111 ''' F•Oflt, Coll"" o . wn114,,, Jr .. 13031 c1111ltl 1111, buol11111 h Mint conclu<tecl br 11 llONALD Kl!NNETH WllCill f NT tOI' l1lbo1 l•!•lllL C1tllornl1, I , ,1., Tu•lln. Ctllf. lncllv!Ovit. c111,.... of Nt1"1 PllUlp G P1rc11. lOG A Gr1rw c ..... ' 1111, bull"11• It. llell\9 cor.O!.lcled itY I -~b• e. s11.n 'f/"1•111 llONAl.0 KENN l TH l11&1oa lt11n4, C1llfo!'nl1, JOlnt Ttnni tl(.r Plr!MIVl1P. Tlolt 11111m1nl IHH wlln llMo COIMl'f WIKlllfNT 1111 1111(1 1111 .. t.1lon wllll flll Thll bu1lnt11 It tw!nt conclvclH ll'f I Jonn It. Wtll>lt Jr. Cltr~ of Or1n•H (Ol/nl• on. At•U U. ltJJ, d t1k of tllll Coo.i•I tOr •ermlflioll 10 Uml!M O•rlnl•thlp. T11l1 1ra11m1nl 1111(1 wi!lo 1111 (Wftl'f Ir fltyt rlY J. M1ddtl1, OtlOU!r CO\lf'll' c.l'l~ot 111t n1m1 ltom llO~ALO KEN· P,hl1!1 O. l'•ICll C!tr• ol Oranoe CouM• Ofl: ,t.oril ?!, ltTl. Cltr~ NET"'I WIKllEfllT 10 DAVID lllONALD Thh 111'-l'l'llnl lllMI wan !Pit ClllHI!" llr lltvirlv J, MtddOA. °"Pu!r County . P,IJUI KE"IT ; ntw llou 1tort . (11•• of Or1111t (1W111r 011 A1rll 11. 11n Clerk. Pvbthllta Or1no~ Co111 D1llJ" Pl!ot, On Saving Acreage By l\flCHAf.:J. PARFJT Chrl1Ut11 SCtlll<t M1111tei' lll'W!Ct IT IS Ht:lllF.IY OlllOElllE O tllt l •ti b'f •••••It J, M1d0011 OIPul'f (O'.lllty l"tJ4'1t MIY 1, ••••• 1l. itn IU•·fl PHIGf,. lntffttrlQ ln lr>e mt1!1t 1t0<1111o Cler~. "ubllillfll Or1n11 Cot'! Otllv Pllol,1--------------~fACKAY, Idaho -R ichard •••••r ., ~P•11""'"' J., Ju~,,,"'' •1111t Mir t t. "· 23, n11 l!:it·n . . C ti t:lO O'tloc;k 1.M. ol J&IQ dt~. t nd 11'1•n 'Vllllv.td Dtt l'ltl Cu11 D1Ur "1101, LEGAL NOTICE Snuth. denlL'il, 11nd Allan et-•IMI th••• ttiow ,,., .. , 11 '"" 111ey h1v1, ;...,.11 u . u. 11\d ,.,..., 1, '· 1tn 1011-n LEGAL NOTfc•· " Id 11 I -" • -"' NOTtCI! TD Cltl!OITOll t I nd I t d WnY II •Pel Cll ~ ... r Cnt flt« nl1"t '--------------•V•••IOO COtJltT o• TH• y. a spt:cu a or an u.°"'ld no1 btl ,,.,,,..,, •· h • • IT IS FUll:THtll OllOEllEO lhtl • LEGAL NOTICE IAlt ,... STATE OF CALl•DlllNIA •Ort wportsman, ave two things 1n Cll(IY flf 11111 O<c!tr to tllOW ttu>e bl! HOTICI! TD Cltl!OITO•S TH• COUNTY o" OltAN•I! llVllll1hfll l11 11\t (Olli Ntll Otlly "Uo!, t StJ,l!ll101t COUltf O• THt: NL A·•t'11 common: ll*"OPtHr OI p nartl clrtulalloll. PUb!I""• l'ICTITIOUS I UllNl!ll STATI! 01" CAL1 .. 0llNIA 1'011 E 1 t11 1 o I RAYMON O l . l O C etll, I NAM• STATIMINT THI! COUNTY O• OllANOt: H0 115lM EYER , O«•t1H, One. they llke th~ Rocky ::... n,.,,;:~~ • .:t!':~: GllCt • .... er Tiit lollowln• Pf:tfolln 11 dolllt llv1ln1n ..... A-JUN NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVE N ,, !ht h. h DATEO M ! 1t7? 11: Esltl• of ROBERT OLt\IER flAl(ER, ,ttdllO'I al !ht tbovt n~med tKt0.111 ~1ountain <:ountry in w IC H~rm:: "'· Scovill• JIM'S JtOCl(SCAl'ING, 3101 10. l'•lr· Jll , ~t•~. 11111 111 ~·-111v1119 c111m1 ag11n11 tllt lh~)' J!ve -a gra11d. open ~)C-JW.e of t~e vltw lld, St. tl, Stnlt Ant , Ct. t2101 NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to tnt S..O•d aettlllllt 1r1 rtQulrtd ID Ult !Mm. f , I nd Svll<!rlor Ctvtt Jaf11.11 L., $tovt ll. l07 Avoct do No. 22, cr10llor1 01 rne abo~ named a.ecr<ltnt w1111 tht IM'CtHtrv V0•1'hlrJ, In fh• ofrl<• pansf' 0 tr~e", \1ll er a "!!!INLY, aODl!HS CG11t1 M111. C11l1or"la. •?1u, 11111 •11 "'"°"1 111vln1 tl1lms •11.•·"" 'h• 01 111, cier~ cl 111, •bov, 1n11tltd court. qr mOUOlainS. !Ill (iwlc Ctll)tt Dl'IVI Wt\! Thl1 bu.!11>1JI J1 btl119 lond11Cltl1 by Ill l~ld llKe<:tnt tte r1aulrKI lo:> l+I• "''""·to Pft St1'11 l'Jtm, wl!ll ll'lt 1'19(1\St r, ' 11111• A111, (t.llhw'llll n 111 lt1d1vldwt, Wo1h mt nKt•1••• "°"cl'lers. '" 1"' t!tlct wouclotr•, to tht vn<1v1otn6'<1 11 U9t tf. T~'O, they art. concerned T•h 011) ,..,_.,,, J1mt1 L. S!ovtU of lllt clerk ot U\t tbo~• tnl!r ltt:I covtt. o; Mounr,ln Awu•u•. Ont1rlo. C1JUorn1 .. th I nd' I I h "•h Alltrfll'l'I .., l'ttlllwiff Tiiis 1t1temen1 !Htt:I wll!'I !llt C1111n1Y lo 1r11ent !hem. with !ht ntce)l~r 1 WlliOo 1, 1111 Ditti 01 buslnen 01 '"' 0Ver e a S U Ure. W h.. Pubil"1td Ort nlf Cot~t D.lolr ,.ilol ':ler~ DI Ortnlt Countv .en A•rH 11. 1912 V0UC°'trs, II lllt undtrt~o;: 'ciJ~i.t~~~ unOertloneO !n t ll mt1!1r1 Plf!tln:n1 11 means they arf' interested in a MIV f, I •• 2). JO, lf1? l10t-1; bV 8tvttfy J. Mtl)(loK. Otputy (eunTV r~fi'OF!er e:~~~rllt~~l:v"'~td, Wt~tmln1ler: ll'lt eSl"t OI ltld lltcl'Otnt. Wllloln '-1r vast land-planning project in-ClertF.. .,1n1r C1Utornr1 t26fl. wn10o 11 ,,,. Pl•<• ct mo111n1 11trr l>M: 1lr11 pullllctrJon of Thi:. F "ubllSllf'<I o.11111 CCMlll 0111-, PllOt. buslneu or tnt un<Ht1loned 111 •II m.rte•s no~ci~ A 11 1~ un iliated by the U .S. orts l LEGAL NOTICE • 11 11 ,. "'• , , 9 1,11 1011 n .,111n1n1 10 "'' 111111 oi 111d oett<11111. • ... • Service . ..pt ' "' ' 1 ' • · within raur "'°"'"' 1111r tllt 11111 11vbl1C1· 1f J:i••t• 1on1 Dolle• Othenvise, the men are d if· ferent, and face one another on <lppos ile ends of a heated NOTICE TO CltEOITOllS '-----...,.--...,.,-,.,=----1'1on ol tllll notlc•. Admlnl1lr1rr lx Pl !ht E1!1l1 SUfll!lt\Olt COUllT o" THI •· LEG•L NOTICE Ottro APra 1J, 1t11. of rne •bovr n~mtt:I d1<t111~1 STATI! 01' CALll'OltHIA "0111 n CONNIE 8. TUR:NER JONES & TUCKl!llMAN TMI COUNTY OJ' OllAH•t Allmln:1tr1trl• cl !!•e Esl•lc Cl A l'rtfHllOn tl CO<llll'll lll'I HI. A·f"IJ ,ICTITIOUI IU11HllS !Pit tbOwt 11tmt1I dKtdtnl Un ff, Mtunltl11 AYlllll .. Estlle ti HARRY JOHNSON, Oect1$td. 1t.:.MI! STATIMt:Ht ANTON DUMMAllT 011ttrlo, Ctllftr~Jt tl1't black-tie dinner today for members of his 1937 class al l...__PE_O_PL_E _I Duke Universily Law School. The President and Mrs. Nix· on will receive the 63 guests in lht grand hall of the While Howe. to background m usic b y the Marine Corp 1 Orchestra. BRINGS 'EM BACK -Bloodhound Dugan. IB 1nonths, and O\vner·trainer, Santa Cruz D e puty ::lhcrlff Sam Robus telli are c:redited \Yilh s aving lives of Jeffrey Davidson, 5. and Kerry Buchanan, 8, \vho wandered fro1n Santa C ruz campsite. This brings to s even the number or persons dog found in relatively short c areer. CO.ntTOVerSy. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to tn1 Tiit lollowlnt per$Oll It Golrrt b111lne.H 1H1t lttth •olilt•t r' Ttl: 0141 fll·114t . . , trtdllors 11 !hr 1kv1 n1me<1 decMcnt '': Wt1!mln111r. Ctlifornlt t1•1l Al111rn1y1 IOI' Admlnl1tr1trl{ Dr. Smith JS a Ql11et advocate t111r 111 parun1 htvl111 <ltlms •i•lnsl 1·,e 1. U.S. 1t1cln1 Tt" lti .. JH Pybllllltd Or•ne1 C0ts1 Dtllr l'•lt!, Or \vl.lderness preservati'on. ~•Id ciec1a1n1 tr• required 1~ lilt 111•m, 1. u.s. R1cln1 C1111n At1tr111r ltr A~mlnl11tHrl• Aprll 11, 15 1nd M•r 2, t. 19'2 1001.11 wl1n 1111 l'llCtl't "' voucntr~. '" llot of1lce I. U.S. Ricing WhHll Pubtl11\1d Ortntt Co1st D1ilY flilct.1---------·----- Gefty \\•a nts no restriction~ of tht ''''" 01111e 11>&~• entitled'°""' or •. u.s. 0«1no 1 r1k1s M•v 1, t. 16, 2J. 1tn 1145.72 LEGAL NOrJCE . to Prt>tnt lhtm. Wtlh !ht ntctiSlrY S. U.5. lltldn!I Sutl'fnl1M on land use. \\'1lderness or vouclle11. 10 1111 ulldtr1ienrd 11 . 2111G 6. U.S. ll1cJno flrOducll, 1?r J1mes LEGAL NOTICE d h ' ( Blltd S I .!(I C M St .. Costt M111, C..lllornl1, 12'?1. SUflllllDll COURT (II' THI otherwise an es voci erous H~rbor ··. Y It 1• 0'11 11•· '·'· •1,1,,. ,,, ,, •• , "·· cos11 STATt: o• CALll"OllHIA JIOlll ' • . C1111. tt•26. whrc:h It tllt Plt't ol bu•lnt1s .. • G and OUtspoken In h tS Op-ol lllt 1111dttslgned In t ll mllllrs per· Mesi, C1!lfo-nl1, tt621. IA.It UIJ TNI COUNTY 0,. 01 .. N I! t I 1 th I I pl kf fl ..,._,I Tlol1 bu•IMU 11 lltl"t condUcllfl llr t n STATIMl!NT DI" AIAHOOMIHT 01" A 1tiMJ position. ~1r11r: ~: • ..!n:·. ·.rier ,,!',;,,. :..bllct'. lndlvldutl. USI o• l"ICTITIOtJS ltJ51HE$S HAME AMfNOl!O CITATION llt:/COHTIST 01' I I I 11.J. l ltlltr Tht to!lowln1 persons lltve tb•Mlontd WILL. AND flltOOJ' 01" SllVICt: At issue_ is a Forest Servi.Ce 11~1f .. /",J.,";1i'·1,71. Tiii• 111,,'"'"' fl!M with tht COl.lnlJ the use 01 lht llclltlous bus<Mss n1m1 E1tare ot LAURETTE LANE. •~• Study, \Vh!Ch attempts to 111· HtrtY GQOdwi" JW.n~on Clt rk of Or1n11 COi.in!'/ on AMII 11. lt11 HACIENDA It.EST MOME ti lf41 t:1st L.AURETTE ANH E LANE, 41k• * * * ' ·enlorv and partially classir)' E11ec:uter of 111e w111 o• bY ''"''" J. MeddolC. °""""' Countr C1n11r s1r111, A11111tll'l'I. c11uorn11. LAURETT E·A"IN L.ANE, OKet'lld. • • fllt •b<rlt 111mtd lflKtdtnl Cllrk The llcllt!ow tlvlflll1J lllmt rtltrrld lo The P!Ople ol lllt St1te of Ca!llornlt some 20 million acres Jn the "'''''A. 1!11tm1" "11156 tbove Wt• ll!ed In Orlnff Coul'IY on To: FIRST WE\ TERN BANK ANIJ R k 'f ta • I 2tfl HtrMr llH., Nt. •1 P~btlshtd Or1nt1 Cot1! Otilr Piiot. fdlrutr'I' 2t, lf17. TRUST COMPANY ; RALPH 8EACH 1 oc y I> oun 1ns -~ co. (tilt MtM. Ctlll. H'll Aprll 11. "· tnd May 1, ,, lt n n1·11 Geor .. w. Perkins. 1141 e11t Centf• l\IA ICURZE; l\IA SCH ERER ; THE LMA I t . ( I bo j lh T ''"I "'"""ft strHt, Ari.helm, C1UI. LEBECK; OON E. BEACH: KENNE T~ ec ion () parce s: a u e ti: . .. Miry M. Stlm1111, 601 Jotn W~'/. BEACH; RICHA RD c;. BEACH: VIOLA. . r 'I . e Atltrllty 1"' l •ec:w OT PIK-•I•. C•lll. 8URllNGAMEi CHAllLES ,.ULLUM1 'Jellystone Parks t _, "1ayor Frank RJ:r:io likes h is job so much he sa ys he would like to stay on for 20 years anti he might even have the law changed to permit him to d o ... Set in 20 States s1z.e o t\ a1n . PYbU111tc1 D•11•tt CD11I O•ilr "!lot. LEGAL N ICE ... oc T ---------------! Thlt buslntll WIS cOnd~cltd llV t CHILOllEN'S HOME S IE Y OF' This survey. encompassing Mi y '· 1'· 2'· JO, ltn 1101·12 Gtnt rtl P1rt11trU.I•. SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA; SHRINER\ the f Id ho N d '--------~------! ft/G-ge W. Perkin• H 0 SP I l AL S F 0 II C It I P PL ED slates 0 8 • eva a .1· NOTICI TO ClllDITOllS llOHALD H. P,lt:HNt:ll CHILDREN: LOI Al'iflfl Unit; tnd AU Utah, Wyoming. Colorado, and f,EGAL NOTICE Ha. A m1• ATTDIHt:Y AT uw "'no111 1nrer,111d In rnr Wiii 01 s110 f Sv-let Cturl ef Tiit JU Wtlf Tlllr.I llrttl Otc,dtn!, According lo the c i I y charter. the mayor can serve only two consecutive four-year terms. ''I'm going to change the charter so I can run 20 years." tht fonner p o t I c e com- missioner said. "l'm going to be around ror a long time. The majority ol -people, if you do not do the job they will vote you out of of· tict." * * * The Philippine First Lady, Imelda Marcos, is still un- dergoing tests to deiermine \\'hether she i5 expecting her fourth child, Pre s i de n t F erdinand E . ~1arcos said. The Daily Express. edited by a nephew of Mrs. Marcos. E. P . Romualdez. reported that Mrs. Marcos was ex· peeling a baby in Decemebr. Jf confirmed, the baby would be the first to be born lo the wife or a Philippine president while holding office. * * * Former California Gov. t-:rl· maad G . "Pat" Brown, say ing "there is not much chance lo ucape reality,'' urged Carroll College graduates to take part in politics. In a commencement address at Helena, Mont. entitled "Revolution. Justice a n d P olitics," Brown took note ot the personal revolution among youth, blacks and feminists. as well as the "turmoil and revolution" in b u s i n e ~ s • 1cience1 technology. educalion and the church. hJn a world of change and ttvolutlon, too often it is justice that is the first victim, for change can be a ruthless dictator, an iron ruler that says, 'It must be this way.' And justice is a subtle. gentle, deeply internal concept.·• he said. * * By CURTIS .f. SITOMER c111·11f11n Scitnc1 M011it1• S1rwtc1 YUCCA VALLEY -When Amy's at· Jellyslone. shc·s doing her thing. What's her lhing? ''\Vhy. swimming. riding. crafts, hiking. swings. You know. that kind of stuff."' ex· plains the S.year-old, im· patient lo charge off to Boe Boo's playground to shake Yogi Bear's hand. Jellystone. Boo Boo. Yogi Bear? Sounds like a Hanna Barbera cartoon. It is -only better. Boo Boo. Yogi. Cindy. and Ranger Smi!h have all gone into the camping business. And within the next few nionths. 49 "Jellystone Parks" \vill be in operation in 20 states and Canada. "Jellystone," admit Amy's l\1om and Dad, a couple of city slickers from Los Angeles. •·is luxury c.amping for sissies:· For l\\'O years nO\I'. al tht. hinl of a long weekend. they've gassed up the i r Vnlks \va_gen bus a nd headed Trial Set For Four 111 Death SAN FRANCISCO (AP\ -A !rial to determine if clear-cut- ting is sound logging practice on Nationa l Forest lands has been ordered bv the 9th U.S. Circu it Court or' Appeals The courl ordered thf' case rem anded to the U.S. Dis!ricl Courl in Portland ··for tria l on its nierits. ·• The ac!ion re versed the dismissal of a suit filed last June by a communt. group. Fam ilv Clan, Inc ., that "·ants lo ~1Qp <'lcl'lr-<.·utting ol fill J-'ormer President Romulo acres in Oregon 's Umpqu<1 Na- Betancou rl is return1n,i:: to tional forest near Roseville. Vennuela this monrh. ending Th e group. comprised of 17 eight year! of voluntary exile a do I es c en I s and th ree in Euro~. children. is buyinc 135 acres of A spo'kesman at his Bern private land aC'ross the creek \'illa in Switzerland declined, rrom the 59 acres sold b:v lhc h owever. to comment on Forest Ser,'ice to U .S. teports that he plans 10 be a Ply "·ood Champion Papers lor candida1e in next y ea r '~ Jogging. presidential elections. _ _::.::__:__ _______ _ The 63-year-old Belonco0<t. ANIMAlogic founder or the Ac c ion Democratica party. \\'ill be ac- companied by his \\'ife, the former Renee lfartman Viso. who is a medical doctor. They were married in 1968. * * * part of Calirornia. is part o 21 11'"" s111t If c1111tr1111 ,., "" ''"''An•. c11;11r1111 n111 ·THOMAS 111. eE ... CH, Jiit. •rid MAil· national program 0 f Un· NOTICI O• AVAILAllLITY fsllt• of C~~zllrE~rt~H MAllTIN Tlllf'llOnll Ml-4JJI ,, .• Ho .' ••O>> :~~111",1=~-ert'd ind lilto •mendtd wrl! d I d I d o .. AHHUAL ltll!l'OltT SE " DK Md ... up here lo S outher n eve ope an surveys. l'Y•~•nt to section 6l<M (Ill ol !111 N~~ i1 .,.,1.~., f 1v111 to 1111 crM1nor1 ..;.~~~f.".°nd ~=~';. .~C:::'191~tily i:,i~~}] :~: !'1fi"~~.?~,°"P01tt.on to tn1 •rot1111 ol California's high desert in pie· These 20 million acres ma"ke 1"1''"11 lltvenut COdtl. not ice Is n•reoy 01 111e 1t10v1 namH dtcrdrnt "''' 111 Now, 11otreklr•. pur1Ytnl to 1t1tutt, .,1111 , t lv1n 11111 1111 annutl re-t for 111e "rtoni lltvln• cl1lm1 1111ln1! lht wld h di 1 , 1 1, d , 1, luresque Yucc a Valley. up most of the v Ir I In Ctltndt• Yttr "" of Ft!tchlld·Mlrtln· ···-··· t rt rlQulrMI lo !lit them, wltll LEGAL NOTICE 1'' "'''11' rte t D p • 0 •• ~ • °'l---~~~~--.,,cc=~--·l'mendMI tMtt1I wl!Mn rll!rrr d1"1 t!ler . wilderness in the US not dtlt Fo1md1tlon, • or1v1tt lound•tlon, Is »it 111C:•••••r llOU<ht••· ln 1111 ollk• iervlc e 01 th li cl!i!!on. \'ogi"s YU CC a r<'lreat IS • . 1v11l1bl1 II ll'lt klundallOfl"I P•lnc!ptl ol· !Fie Clerk ot tllt tl>ovt tnlllltll court. or NOTICE TO CIEOITOlll (SE L) i·cp!cte wilh heated s wimrning a lready labeled as such nnder tlc• 10• 111,i>ecllon llYrlnt ••ouiar 0u11111ss tD 11r1wn1 th.,,, with lht "'''"t"' SUl'ERrOR coUllT o~ TNll A WITNESS, Hon, lh W·'td SS A•t ( Jft-"~ · hours lrom 10:00 t.m. to •:!IO P,l'l'I. by 111v ~ouc.ner1 10 !he undtrs11ned It 1111 o!llte 'TATE OJ' CAll•OIHIA l"Olt , .. ,,, ot !ht , .. ,,rior CO'.lrl .,, pool. hors eback r i d i n g. e 1· erne · .. 0 ;ro"I. cillJ~11 wrio r1Que11s 11 w11111n 110 d•~s of eur111, w11111m1 •nd sor1nN11. 6'9 THf COUNTY o• OltANOa ,11·, s111e 01 ciiirornla tor 1111 . . If . t d The purnn~e cf the study t ltlt /ht d1!e of 11115 pUbllttllOn. Soulh Olive, Sul!e 11100. LOI •n1el11. N• A·n•J) Countv cl Ottn11t wltn tne m1n1go . movies, P aygroun · I""' • Tiit f0unclt llon'1 prln.clP•I attic• ls Ct lllotnl1 t001 4 whlfll 11 tllt Pltct 01 E111re ot TOM ·w. HENOElllSON, ,.1so •~•I ol stid Court itll•ul 1111, !eleViSiOn lounge, and arlS and Forest Service officials Say, is loc11M1 tt 10!5 Grtnvlllt Drive, NfWPOtl t>u1ln1u of !ht undtr1l1ned In t U m1Ut•s known 15 THOMAS W, HE!l.'OERSON , t~cl APrll lO. ltn I · "Id 811d>, Ctlllor'!lt t2660. 1>1rltlnl119 lo !ht t sltll of •tld d1cMltnl, 11 TOM HENDERSON Oe<cttit'd. c rafts classes ror the small to se ect prime WI erness Th• prlnclPtl m•n•i•r of 1111 tound•tion w11111n rour mon1111 1U1r 111e flrtt 111.1Dllc•· NOTICE 1s HEREBY GIVEN 10 1ne :1~Z~1~ e:. si. JOHN fry . Additionally. l\1om has ac· ~---~~-------.,111 H1rry T. M1rtlnd1te, T•UllH. Vitt tlon of tflls notice. crtdltors ot 1111 1b1;n1t n1'"ed d1,!'llen1 Couniv Cltrk tricl Cltrk I pr1&ld1nf a. S«"rtltrv, Otl!'ll April U. lfl"t. rn11 t 11 Ptrson~ h1V1111 cl11ms 111ln1t tllt o! 1111 S~Hllat Court of IM cess lo most <Jf the comforts: LUUc ... McH1tt, WllHt LUt11n M1J1lnt S.imin 11ld c1eced1nr ire rt!<lulrtd lo 1111 t11em, sr11., of CtllfOtnti 1or lh• cou1111 of home. including ho l OUTDOORS ""'"' & Cht•I•• fir:1cu1.ri of 11\e win with 11\t n«t"•'l' voucher1. In tht oltlce 01 Ort"" ... ,........,.. ., LIW ol ••Id c!t'"""' ol Ill• clt rl( QI Ill• tbovt t nlllltd COUfl, or Br S.liollA J. SULL.IVAN, showers. a hair-care ctnler, 611 Wttl SI•" SI 1 21111 ,.1 1vr111, w11111m1 '"' llf-• ro Prestnl lhem, wilh !ht n1ce,,;1rv OtPul~ · rH • "" '4t S.. OI'"-'"'· ,.. vouchtrt • .to Int ur.dt•1lontt:1 1t Ille ofl'it• automatic washer and dryer, L• A ........ C1Uttr11l1 NtU . L" All ...... C•Utlfnl.8 "'" ol THOMAS w. HENOElllSON. Jr., Al· ·N1tn1 ol con!11t1nt '--------------'! ,.UlllllllH O•t111e COl!I Otily "•1DI, Atl.,.M"I ftr l llt<Wlrlll !Ofl>eY II L.w. 150 Et•I Ill" $trttl, (OJtt Pub!IJl'ltt:I Ortn.gt CCMI!! Otily •01o1. and library. M•r t, H11 1201·12 P1tn1v. Mt» Ctlllornl• ,.,.,, Whlc.11 ;1 lh• Pltce Apr il 2s tnd Mtr J, •. 16. 1'7l IOH-11 Oltd s t i 11 takes pride In candidate areas berore they Publllhtd 0r1nH CHU D11lr "11o1. 01 t>u;>nen 01 "'' und~•sitntd in .u mtr· are developed and to Met 1, t, 16, 21. 1tn 11.i.11 ru1 i>erl1inlno lo '"' r1!1te cf u ld dcct· LEGAL NOTICE whipping up a mean bacon 'n LEGAL NOTICE dtnl, wlltlln tour mon1h1 1ft1r 1111 11r11'l--cc-~c--~~--~~~- •ggs breakfast. And with a Iii· determine the best manat!:e· PUblic•tlOfl or 111;1 nollce. NOTICE o" r1usr1l!'S sALl men! practices for them. The •1cr1r1ouJ •us.Hess LEGAL N011CE 011tt:1 April 14, 1011. uN0111 ot:fo o• r11usr tie coddling, he'll even s top HAMl 1TATfMfNT THOMAS w. HENDERSON -TF JSlll deadline for selection is June Tiit 1ouow1111 """"'' ,,, H ine Execu1or 01 the w111 oi ""' Lw11 Ht. \IA 61111 r emin iscing about cooking OUI h butlness ,,, 1llove n1med c1rce<1tnt No!lce ;~ nerebv 9iven 11111 WESTSIDE over an open fire. bed-rolling 3-0. after whic selected areas LAKE 0 II. 0 II ILL. e {.AND TA~~~;~·~T .. 0~ ... :::1'11 THOMAS w. HENDEllSOH, Jiii .. TITLE COMP ... NY, A Llmlttd Ptrtnerlfl·• .1 will be managed a s Wilderness AS50CIATEs, 1111:1 CtmDrldee t.11"11. 1TATI OI' CAL.t.,OllHIA Jlt E111 11111 '""'· '' tru1tt>t. or s1tcce11or trus1r1. D• Under lhe Stars. and pre-uaWn Hunl lnt1lon 8et(h, Ctlll. NOTICll! (II' IALI! (11!1 MHI, Ct lllorn/1 f'l11l IUb!tltule!I lru1trt pUr1u1n! to 1111 dttd ol hikes lo the mountain "crick... until final studies are com· llollert E. Not. 19113 Ctmbtldlt Lll'll, 1'011 TAXt:I OH UNSl!CUlllD !•I: 1114) ~.·7116 lrusr IXtcUled llr MARION ORVILL E p)eted Huntlnolon fltech, Clllf, l'llOflll llTY .. 111r111y fer lle<llllr TACICETT, JR. t nd CAROL ANN However, he still draws· the . Arvlnd H. Trlvtel!. 2~111 Altnwoofl, El Wi.tEREAS, HOWAll.O I" .... JOANNE ll. Publl1tlrd Dr1n11t (Gisi Dilly ,.itot, T•CICEll. l'lu1btnd Ind Witt and record· line against the chicken chain Here in Idaho. the land in Toto, c1nr. HAllROLO 111.,. 1111" •nd negltelefl to APrll is •r.d M1v 1, '· '" 1Jn 1014·12 td ou. 'lf. 1•11 111 book a..n P•11 1111 01 t. lo 1. J1m11 GrtHtn, 123 Ct llr t1:cc:1 PtY. ullOn aemt nd. ''"" on vniecurMI Ollldel RecDrds ln 1111 of!ICe or 111e Coun• that delivers the dinner bucket ques ion comes seven Vi1t1, s.,, Clel'l'li nrt, ''"'· ., .. -• ... 1 LEGAL NOTICE " Rrccrde• of O••~°' '°"'"'/· c111torn••· h "d f PIOMrty In t~t IUl'l'I _.. • """ d I 1 Ott 4 ""r1"ght 10 your Campsite." million ac res -One•t Ir 0 This bus!ntSS h bfl/119 COfldicltd llV t l lSl'SSf'!I tor Ille yetr 1t11 I 11'\d 1912 Ill PUtlUl n! 0 ll'lt Not Ct 0 IUll t n Limited P1rt11tr\lllP. I " 0 Er.ttlon lo Sttl lhlr1und1r ttcorded J1n, the whole Rocky ~1ountain in-Robert E. Noe WHEREAS, under tr.d by v rtue 01 ' · Al Jtl) Jot, 1tn In book '97S i:>aot 11~ 01 •~Id Ot· .JellySIO/le iS a Sympfom Or a j d IS l ( th Th" rd provl1lon1ofStcllon19\t ol !ht (1Uf0tnl1 NOTICE TO Clll!OITOI S lltlll Rt,ardl, Witt Ull, on MIV 21, lf1J '· ymbol _depending how you \'en ory an percen O e '' 1t11tmtnr Ill ,.,.111 tnr CGunir Rtvtt1Ue •ncl Ti xi llon Code, 1111 1011ow1no sul't:11 101 cou1r o~ THt: it u :oo ~.m .. 11 •~e nari" fronl rntre~:• t t , j d Alt a th some Clerk of Ortnet Covntr 1n· APrl1 n , un ~rootrlV htl btt " srlttd for lllt Pllrl'Oll ST•TE OJ' CALIFOllHIA .. OR le 1111 Orin;t Countv Courtnouie lctite!I look at ii. S a e S an • o..,e er 8V 8tverlr J. M1ddo~, DtD~fy County ol lt lt •t Public t lKllM for !ht lllllllt· THE COUNTY 01' Oii.ANGE n! 100 Clvi' Ctnl•r Orlvi Wt>I lormtrlv JO million acres here remain Cltrk. tion of s1ld unP•ld t••es, toortll1r wllh No. A·125U we11 t t1o sirrtt, S•nl• Ant , Ci lltO!'nli 11 Along with Kampgrounds of as o(fi'ci·a1 and unofficial , .. ,11,,,.. •••-· c-·.. "114'11 111n1111rs 111..-eon end (01ts of s1I•; Ell•t• at L.ESTER F. LANOERS. ~ubll( '"'''°"· 10 111, 111~11,11 ttidd•r tor d h · I ¥ ...... ~., 0.Jly Pilot, NOW, THEREFOllE. NOTICE IS De<otud. tl!ll (pt~tb!t 11 l~t !!me of i tlt Jn Americ an an o I er priva e wildernesses, making Idaho Mty t, 11. 'lJ. lO, 1tn 1212.n HEll.EllY GIVEN t1111 !ht covnty T•• NOTICE 1s HEREllY GIVEN to 111• 11,..,.,1 mon.., o1 t~e unlttd sittrsJ ,11 chains, it's diverting from na-r h "Id t t . th Collector of 0.11101 '°"'"''· ""'"' Ind ll'f crM1Jtor1 ol rht tbovt ~mid d~crdenr tl;hl, tlllt , Ind ll'ttrtll. convtrtd to t nd One 0 I e WI e s S ates In C vlrtvt of 111t t vtllorllY conl1rrtcl llv ltw U.tl t ll Hr10n1 llevlnt d11m1 lt~on,r 1n, "'""" lleld by fl undtr 11ld detd 111 t'Jt r>ro· lional parks and otrer public Union. LEGAL NOTICE uoon wld ofllctr, win 1111 11 P1Jbllc 111t· 11ld de<tt:ltnt •r• rlQu lred I~ tilt 111em, pirrv sllvitt In sird c°"'"" •llCI Sttri \voodsy by~•ays a healthy !Ion to fllt l!ltlllsl bidder. lor Ctlh, l1wlu l wlllo Ille n«tnorv "°"ch•rs, '" tht oll''' dtic•ibtd 15 to/lows: However, these expanses of •A• Jf4I mollt'I' o1 1111 U11lltd s11111, "" "" 1tt11 of !ht clttk ol lf'lt lbovr 1n1111tt:1 court, or Lot /J, Tr•c• •2Jl. '" tht en., o1 Coit• chunk of the four million I I l'ICTITIOUI IUSIHll!SS div ,, M1y, lt~. 11 ltlt llour fJll f.;00 10 orn1111 """'· wirn rne neceisiry Mt 1t, caun•r of or111ot, st11, 0, Americans who seek their a n· empty roun ry concea a ma· HMUE STATllMENT o'<loc~ ,..M.,., wld d•Y • .i '"' 0ttic1 of vouclltr1, to 11\t unGtrsltlltd '' 1111 office Ct lifotn11, •• Nr m1• tn1reor rKord~o J-or reserve of raw r esources Th• 1o11ow1n, "'IOlll 1,1 doint 11\e or1n11 CCM.1ntr T•• C.H«tor. 6lO N. 011111 Attotner : JACOfl N. PEIL TE , 1•10 In book '"· 01011 11 Ind n. nual Vacat ions in the outdoors. "'-·>i·-s t i: llrOldWlt S1n11 Ant tllt lollowlntt Etlt Ch1Pmtn A~. Ortnte. (lllfotn•1 mi1ttUeneovs mips rtcordi ol lt ld -timber, minerals. water. "" ...... , 1..,· .... much flltl'IOI ,, """' which 11 mt Pit« 01 11u.i""1 01 0 c , AK 3011 0 , \Vith resorl. hole!, motel, DlllANGE COUNTY ACOUSTICS, 142l tlCt Pf'OPf: •• ,, °'loll !lot undrrsloned 1" tll mtlttrl perllfllln; rtnge oun "· · .A, 1rr f ld And any attempt to plan U.~ s. Ht1Pttlf,i. S1nt1 A11•, C1llfornl1 "''' be ntct&M•v. '• ••ll11v Ille unPlld 10 trie e11,1, 01 ~ st!d dtct'dent. wunln A-:e., ca~t• Mtw. C1111. . and restaurant prices soaring. of the land, in a state which T~Hldor1 111. s.111n111. u22 s. 11~u. '-"'''with Pllntrtln l!'ltraon '"" lour ,._1111 i f1tr tht ti•n put10cttlon 01 s110 s•I• will bt 111.ae. but w,1,,au1 h · Ht11>etl1n, S1nt1 Ant , C1lllor11l1 tllt CGll'I of conduclln1 ltlcl lt lt, 1111 11 t ccven1nt or w1rr1ntr, tXPtrS1 or lm111!1d. s lafe tourist bureaus ere in depends on such resources for T~.ai!or• G. strtin111, 1'0li N. Lowe ll eS1l1"1trd •' 111t wm of 1rt.J::1. ' no ' · --•ro•rdlnt 1111,, PD•~tnlan or '". the \Yesl and North,vest repQrt L1n1. s11111 """'· C1l1fornl1 01'11 8D1t CF .. ln·AH. 31 n. Av•lli•rY Otlrd ic:"/1~~,'~N '~~111 N LA OER cumbt1nc11. ro sttls•r 1111 ll'lcltlltednr!• economic security. is a matter J•Y R. 5,11111nr. "°' H. •rlstol, Arn. v1,..i • • 1 N s 1ecurec1 11'1' 11ld oeect, '""vc11n1 the 1,, family ca mping vacations r ., I . l 0 St nll An1 C1Hlwnle Dll lllt 01rmr111 of tllt P!'"lce 11:a tor 1nv AOm!n.l.rllOI' Of tllt Ell•I• ct Ind UPtnJes ol '"'' lrlll!H 11'\d cl '"' •harpt,v on the r1'se. The trend 0 VI a interes. T ~ll butlnt11' 11 btln1 conduded 11'1' • trOPertr told. Thi Count• TIK ColltCIOt ol JACO • ·~e :~t~~llT'led dtCedfnl lrus!1 c•ttlrd bV •tld dt tt:I, tdva~c·1 0 Although the Forest Servi·....., l'trfnershi.. Or1ntt Councv. or 1111 11•rJOn ccndoKtl~• · 1111r•undtr, wllh l1111rr11 11 ~rov,a1d · · j SI I k " T•Co0 G S ,1 1 '"' st lt Oft hi• bllltll. wUI dtllve~ ll'lt 1110 E. C~1pm111 Avt11u1 11orre!n, nnd lllt unpt!d Prlnc!ot t pf '"~ IS nal1ona · • a e par use ar•ues that ... 1·1derness use 1·s , .... °'' · • '"" 1 ,h D••n11, c1t11ot~l1 t2U1 nett securea bv s1ia dna· 10.w.1 I • 80 t · " " ' This 1t1ttmtnt fllld wllll tlle Covnh 1eld 1>•0Perh to I~• P\lrCh•••r · ote "'' T1I: '3J-f4JJ ~2.l a10 11 wlln 11111,,11 ll'lfrrc" ,;0m A~t a one ts up percen since only part of its multiple-use Clttk el Dr111;1 Countv o": "''" •. n 12. with 1 bill 01 111,. •rid '"' 11111 .tltlt AllDrl'llY tor Aclmlnlt1tt i.r 1. i9n ·,, orovloed 1~ 11id nor1, · lhe 1960's . And the Recrca· approach, the issue ha s BY flev1r1v J. MKGO•, £?rt11tr countr 111er1;ipon ••tt 111 snld putcn11itt. Pubttikec1 oraMe~ C0tst o1;1y 1>1101, Otrt<1: APrll ''· 1,11. n .1naJ Vehicles ) n S t i t U t C Clrrk.N STOW °''",' o"e'e'o'r· ',tn,. ITlllON Mev 7, 9, 16. 23, 191! IU6·n WESTSIDE TITLE COMP,ANY polarized into w i Id er n es s COHE • Ka a OWl!H • ~s 1utn Trust~ estimates 3.5 million recrea-ATTOlllNllYI AT uw CCM.1ntr T•• Co!ltctor LEGAL N011CE er WESTERN DEED versus multiple·use factions. 121t H. lrMfw•y, Ht. 11t er Or1no1 '°"'"'" CORPORAT ION lional rigs will be bumping "Leave lhe land atone." 111111 An•, c111wn11 f11f1 ev H. Humph•rr, ,.., 1 , ev Wivn• H Mt11'1ew• down the na tion's roads this Ttl: IJt·tZff · As•'1 T•• CoUKtor Autllorlle<i oititr• Getty savs. "I d on't buy any l"tUlt O•Pl.llV su"'""~g~"''r°vu~~ 0:11~~~1:011N1A 16,,. Summer -a m illion Or mOrC COnsider8tion Of \ViJderness "ubll11'.td' Ortnot COllst 01fJy ~!let. ~ulltllhtll Drtntl Co11t Dtll'I ,:~~; 70f Civic Ctllltr DrlVt Wtll Publishlll Drtf\Vt Cats! D•lly Pflor. here in Callrornia. Mtr '· u , l3, JO, un 12ill·71 Mir t. 1117 s1n11 An1, c1111Drnl1 M•Y ?. '· u . 1tn 11JJ·11 areas. These purist pres erva-CASE NUM&l1t Amy's family is "con1plete"' tionists are trying to lock up LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE SU•••••• ·U1•'~'•••·••• in its can1per·styled bus. It 1 d · -1 d .. .. LE GAL NOTICE our an as a pr1v1 ege In rt tllt m1rr~1oe 01 Petitioner: 1---::-:-=cc::-:ccc~cc=-'cc-~--SJeeps four, carries sev en sanctu::rr.v." PICTITIOUI IUSIHl!IS LYDIA MARIE WELLS 11'\d lltSPOfldent: HOTICt: OJ' T11usn1·s IALI gallons of ll'aler, conlains HAMii STAT•MllHT JllCTITIOUS I USIHll!SS ROBERT GARRA RO WEL.LS HO. FfC 6 .. , KS Throughout manv of lhe Tht 101iow1"' ""°" Is clolnt llu1i1'11s1 NAME STATEMENT To t~e Re<o-enr: llobrtl G1rrtrd wells on Miv '""· u12, 11 11 .00 11 M \\'ashing r~cilitieS, a portable · 1s· The followln1 PfrlO>I '-flolni bv1111111 Tht "1111-r his I/ltd t pellllon ton· NORTHWESTERN TJTLE COM ... ANY'o i' d l k""' j j ( public hearings held recently. OIVE IStFIED OEVELO"E*S COM· •1: m· cernino yovr mtrrle1t. You m1r Ille ·1 AL.AMEOA COUNTY, a torPOFtllon, •• range, an ac ....... an en or miners. loggers, ranchers, and PANY, 1t111 c .... 11rldt1 L1n•. Hvn· NEvts ENTEllPlllrSES. 1t111 Ct wrlttell •eiPOn!• ,..11111., 1111,1v oevi 01 111, duty •Pl"olntH Ttvitei .,110,r •n• \\'ind protection. f!ntlon •etch. C1ljf. llrldt1 Ltnt1. ttunllntlon llttcll. rll!t th.II m11 1umm6ns Is srrvecl Oii rou. oursu1n1 lo Oeed DI Tn111 rec:ordtcl A••il local sportsmen echoed h is Robert !'. Noe. IJ11l c1mll1lll" L1~. llobtrl E. Nct1, 1'711 ''"'11'11111 Li nt. 11 "°"' 11;1 to lilt 1 wrlntn ••wonse 11, 1t11 , 11 1"111. No. 1n11. In boct "°'• Ho"·ever. this is a modest · h t · z j n g Hu11tllll'IM 1t1cP1. Ctllf. H1,t111lntlOl'I ll••Oo. w11111n "1Ch t!mt rour del8utt m1y bt P1oe ~01, or 0111c111 R1<o•a1 1~ 1ne oftlt t low.price unit, compared with view. C Ir IC er I 1111s t>u1lntss 11 titln1 conc1uc1H b~ •n Tiiis bu1Jnus Isbel~• conauc!td llr 111 ent•rt'd i nd tllt ~ou•t ""'Y tnier 1 01119. of"'' '°"'"'V ,llKordir ol Ottnoe count•, \Vilderness supporters a S 1ncr1vltlu•I. ll'lclJvldual. 111 mtnt contilnfn; 111lunctlwe at 01~1r orr1e11 Sttte 01 ca1.1orn11. WILL SE LL AT the var iely of ca m per s • h 'd 1· r llobtrl IE, Not llcbl!rt E. oe conc1rnln1 dlvhlon Of pt-•• '1>DU11I PUllLIC AUCTION TO HIGHEST lltO-wealt y ouls1 ers ang 1ng or T~•s 111ttW1tnt f11t'd wttti 11'1• county ,.111, 11111m1"t flle-d w11_11 tn.e '°"';,"' aupport, ,11114 (llstoc1v, clllltl a~POrt, a•· oeR FOR CASH 1111r1blt 11 tlmt of silt tra ilers. mobile homes , ;ind a private playground Clttk 01 O••ll9t c ... nir on; Mer s. 1tn. c1tn: of °''"" COi.int~ M. Mty s. l ?. torner's i••s. '°'"' ind iu<ti o•tier rellel 1n 11w1v1 m,,.,e, af t111 Uniltd s1,,,11 tt OlhCI' recrf!a(iona] vehicles • IY lltvtrly J, Mffclu, Dtpvty COl.lnlY llY lltVtrl' J. Ml dOoX, Oef)ut'I Count" bt trlnled b'f 1111 COUl1 tloe IOI.Ill\ ttll<ll enlrtll(I to Ille Or1n11 Or Smith who live s about Cftrk. Cltrfl. .. 11 11'",•:., _..,. 111 "'" tM inlc~ .i 1n ,,. counrr old Court11ou1e. City ol S1n11 An1, \\ 1hich invade public a n d · ' p,11st1 1'111... Staie 01 C•111or11l1 !)r ival• campgrounds across 60 mile! nor th of here where •ub!1111t11 Or•n•• cot1t 0111r ,.11o1, l'11blis11tt1 Ortnff Co•'' Dtll' Piiat, ::."''u~".!~~~1~::=;·..,::,:~':."dS: ';: 111 rl;nt. 11111 1.,d lnt•r•u cOl!\'tvtll 11 ' he moved three vears ago M•r ,, 16, 2J, '°" ltJI 1211.n Me1 t. t6, n , JO. 1tn 1210-n ,.,'"';...,, llt 111" .,. 11..,. ' •"d now ~e1d bv 11 under t•ld 0t1d 01 !he U S · ' ' Tru!t In tnt Proptrtr sltyt!MI In 11Jd · ' from Oxnard, ' Cali£., l 8 °''" Miru. >O, ttn Countv •r.d s11te de1cribtd t1 : So1nc price up to $20,000. . WILLIAM E. $1. JOH N, Lot 1• of Trttl No. 61J7, In IM Cl!r "' I • 1 · ht d chairman of the Rocky ~foun-citrk coi•a Mew. 1, thown on 1 ...,111 thtrrar s cep six o e1g ' an are tain chapter of the. Sierra ,., H1rr1et L. Dobson rteordtd In boot 2w. ••111 N iflll J1. plush with wall·IO •\\'al l Club. YOUR NEWSPAPERBOY l.J.,!1;~"';tt. ~:!~~~1~~v.MtP1. rtco1os 01 1110 Cllrpeting. electric ovens, air ,,,. N1rbor 11v1t .• ~111 111 EXCEl'T 111 011. 0,, 11~d1ocerlltl" condilioning. lelevision, stereo. "I don't think wilderness use ca111 M1u, C•Ufffn•e 11•u 1vb111nces •ncl mlllfl'•I• br whittvtr . t . t d t • m II ftll) ...... ntmt known Ill, on or Ur.dt r Ille lt!Ov• \\ 1aler purifiers. and rorced·air IS res ric e O a s 8 Pv1111t11M1 Or•n9• CCIII 011iv Piior. <111crtH11 '"'"" bliow . a.eth 01 JOO '"' f number or people,11 Dr. Smith Allorl'lly fff ,.tllfltntr mttMl•tt:I wtrllt *''r from !ht .Utfect urnaces. I r th I t st IS ... Publl111td Ol'l~t Co11t D1Uy Pilot '"' troulld, 11111 d!llovl '"' rl1ht al ,n. Tht> average cost ()f single says. " r s one 0 e as e • "' Aprll 11, u '"" M•r '· '· 1911 1001.n ,..., 110011 '"• oortron 01 1110 1urf1c" 01 King Guslaf VJ Adolf or Swtden arrived in Bonn. Germany for a lhree·day st:ite \'isit. f bo aro"·ing uses in recreation to-,,... tround •btvt • •ni~ 01 * tH1 iv <lllllly-lypc units Is a ut " 1ne 11ur-of r•DIGrl~• 10,, bOrlnt, $7,000. And can1pcr compnnie!I' dC1y." CREDIT MANAGER LEGAL N011CE :'~~t~~i,.:r1n!~T4 •-:;::l:C1'1~"',~:r11~ arc busy d e\'eloping fold-out Dr. Smjth argues not for BA.It ir1• w1111 ••c1u1lv1 rlt h1 ro ••Ku!• anv •nit h . k wholesale classification of In· SUPt:llOlt COUltT D" CALt•OltHIA, Ill ltllf!1 ~ tilt ""''--el t11lrtt1ln• tents to allac to PIC ·UP COUNTY OF DllAHGll! or recovtrl"I ••"' 1ubt1111CtJ. ·~ A 21-gun salute boomed out a .,..·elcome for the 89-yeir-old monart:h as he stepped from the plane which brought h im to Cologne-Bonn a I r p o rt . where he was met by Presi- dent Gustav Heinemann and Foreign f\.1inister \Va 11 er Scheel. ... YOU Sll,o "1J:.J•o Cl 1Af8 T#I~ NIGHCST AIO!J.4/f!1/!tl !Of? 11L ! • t rucks and even a ''kangaroo" ventoried areas: as wilderness ,.. c1v1c c"'"'' 0r1w, ttse•vtd 1" 111e ,, ... recordtd 1n bo04I but for th •• electl·on of 1 row. 1 -••"'' •111, c111ttrn/.t 1714. 111" '"'· 0111c1e1 111ec:or11•. s lct>per for mounting on com· M..,N ~ ",..W." "'"'"' 4n't ..... ,.,, .. , ,. '" c Ast: HUM1•1t 0.1»41 Tiit ,1,"1 idd••H '"" o1111, um..,.,,, Paet roreig~model sedans. \\·hich would remain part of ,,. , __ .. _...._ _ ,. .,.. -,. ,., _ ,... ......,.., Mii suMMONI cM.t.1.11 1.t.01:1 d11ltn111on. 11 ... .,. of "" r11r ''°"rtv ..,,. r.,,_ hi ,, fM 1•11rrlt" ti l'tfltltl'lli: dnc1!btd ttlovt IJ ""'''°""<I It bt: 1131 J e ll yslone·.s management the National Forest System ,.,. •""'1 ., ,.., ....,.,.,..., ltt .-• IAILT PILOT • .,,.., II ,AT1t1c1A MA111: EsnY 1 •'Orio«• Ol'lvt. cast• Mt••· C•ll lOl'nlt . I h h b t •· " dlWI man ge<f " ltt~llft DONALD H. ISTl!T' The undt r1l;nte1 Tr111IH dltc!•lm1 1ny w I eadquarters In Sturgeon u U'C' roa Y I • ht ....,_ ,., M....tt. "' .,.... '" ,. ,.., W. _. .,. .. ,. Te lti• 1tt11D01'16tn1: DONALD H. HtblllTY far 1..,. lncorrec:1ne11 ., 1111 "'"' Bo.v. ·Wis •• o!£ers a toll-free j'There are 1ome dlsad· 1sTl!Y-~rtn •nd olh•r cDITllllOll a.,1,,..11o11, 11 ,., f9' ... ....,.,.,. ......... t9 Y••· TM "'lllontr hts flltd t Pfllllon C-. 1ny, lhown herein. national reservatjon service vantages to de t I gnat e d cer111ntt YWr l'l'ltrr itell. v.,., '"'" 1111 • s11t s11t w1M Ill' m1d1. 11u1 .. 1,~our for all Of lhejr Clmp"roUndS:, WiJdemeSSeS.11• he Sly!. "SUCh Wtlllel' rt-St wllhln thirty lllYI 411 1111 to~n1nl Of Wlrrtnty, l •IH'fft. or ltnPlled, r. dtl• ltlll lhl• svmmon1 1, 1ervH on Jou. reottdln• 11111, PDUt~s<on, 111 •~· ~lany are open year-round (as as the crowding which follows c ... ,...,. -.. _..... ,. ...,, cehc.tt-. " ,...., ,.. .... • ..., • 11 rou 1111 to r11e • written •fSPDnH cumbr1nct1. 10 ,.v the rtm•lnlnt ••111- h I bl! I " ~-.. Wlltlfn '"""' flmt. YOU• <ltltun '"'" bt dNI '"'"' (If !flt nol, U<w•"" bY ltld I e c imate a llows). pu C ty. ,.. Jltli •f .......... et" eett91ely ~ fhi Jltlt ... ......, •• t11ltl'tt:1111(1 tllt <ou•t m1' enter• 111111· OIMI or Tru11. to·wll: u,1tJ J1~wr111 In· ---------'---'-------'----'-----------11-~ •I ..... ~ ., ...... -• ... _.llfl ,. ... ,..,. '-" .. l'l'ltllt con!1ln!n• lnlwn<tlve or ollltr or cMr1 terrtt tll~tton, 11 DrO'lllleo 111 11:d l'IG!•. r-_.... .. conttrnlno 4'1rttlon ol ''ooerty. 1p0Ut•I ld'Vlnc:tt, If 1nr, wnlltr 1111 ttrm1 111 »ill KOCM stereol03FM the sounds of the harbor ' ~-~ ..... If .. ....w .. -.m -tr "' ..... •II ~. clllkl (Ullod't. Oolld tVttoe11, 11. Ottd of Ttutl. l'ttt, thtl'ffl llld ••Pf'llt.J ,., -'" ,., ,..r; ' I ~,..,.,. •• IMS, ffllll, I ncl tlKll ettrer r1Utf of lht TtVU•• Ind ot !ht ltlltls Cf'tt!fd I -~---... tt-wm 1t m1r IHI •••nlld '" ""cour1. ~.,••Ill Dttd of T11111. .., ,..,. • ...,....,. ' If r" wllll tt .... tilt 4iflrkl 4lf 111 If• Th• IHlntfkllfV undtr 1•ld Ottd fl ASSURE PROMPT COURTEOUS SERVICE DAILY P'ILOT CIRCULATION DEP'ARTMl!NT ttrwr 111 ~ mtrtll', Ylll .,...._ * 11 Trust h1r110,.,-1 llltCUlld 111d dtl~rtf """'""'., H lfllt ,,_ Wfl""' ,.....,..., It 1'0 llMo Ul'lcll ... ltllllt I Wflltffl Otci.;•tlon ""' !Ml' ... flltf ... ft!N, of Deltutl •nd DtMtnd tor $111, .... . De!M Feb. 4. 1Jl't. writttn Notto ef Dti1ull Ind t!ltdlofl le w .•• .SI, JOHN stll. fllf Ur.dtr1ltfttf Ctutld · .. 111 Nell• Cltfll II Dtt11111 a!ld llKlloft to kll tt .. ,, IUOIHI J. ,,,,~s. rte41fl!MI In fht COUllJY 'WMf9 1trt "" °""11Y "'*'"' It lou!M. <SEAL) Dllt: Aorh ,s, 1m DAIUIL 11. tUCICHUM HOfl.THWl$TlllN Alt41rM'I 11 LIW TITLI COMPANY Jel N ......... C""rr Dri1o• OF AUMIOA COVHlY 11111'1 Ul II ulcl Ttwtltt ,....,..... IUClll, C..1 QWI ly Kl lllY A, hint l'lltllti U141 "4·1Pt Authorl1M Sltn"111• Allllnltf frw htlti.net lPI JtN' l'ulltltl'lfd Orll'IM '"'' OtllY l'11o1, Publlthfl Ott"" C•ui O.t•IJ rn~. '---------------------•----,. ...,..11 ». • .,. ,,,.., L ,, 16, mt 1HJ..n Mt~ 1. '· u. 1m n u.n , ' A d I ii n 0 R 4 • p11 '" ,,, d<I . ., Id " ba 842 d ' s c L u & ' B T lo cl A b b M ,\ " SI p 1. 2. G I lo E Everyone Hos Something Thot Someone Else Wants Tut1d11Y, Moy '· 1972 • DAILY '!LOT II y OU C.n s.11 It' Find It, Trede It With • Want Ad [ -~~. I~ I ........ , .. s.,. _,..... I~ I --~ .. ~ J@ ---I~ I ---~; ---I~ I ---~I ---~ Gtner1I Gen1r1I ****** TAYLOR CO. G en11 ra l -....... * PALERMO * Harbor View Homes A f;im1l y 1101111• 11•hi1·h l·an do11blr 1n l:i rcr J;:rot1p rri- ff"11a in1ni,;. 4 Lgc. Bd1·n1s. All \I ilh !hr Italian R1vie1·a inrlurnrr. 011·nr1• has l'parf:d nolhin~ ln t.'O«I lu 1·on1plete this f1nr home &• noy.1 ii has outgro11"n him. (.'all In \ 1r11 . S62.9::i0. Waterfront Pier Cuslo'll 1h1plr.~. N r 11· r n r I l ~IAn<I. ... This i.<;. 8 brnu1. 11·e1J.kcp1 p11lprr1y -Lor." of pri<Jr in 01\'nrri;hip. 01l'nrr , 11•ill {'al1)' 1st T.D. loan \l'ilh no Joan co.~ls. O/frrcd al $82,000. CORBIN- MARTIN REAL TORS 644-7662 I $33 ,150! 1 4 Bdr + Family rm 4 Sµ,,riou.~ IX'droomi::. 2 pulltnan barhs, hut:r fan1 ily room l'nhan(•rrl h~· hand<;0n1r fircplatf'. a I I rlcct.rii: drram k i I r h r n , deluxr t:iuil!n1s, <h.<:h1\11~her. pass lhru lo gardC'n palio - Ideal for Pntertaining. Trr· I ra('{'<l cn tl'alll"f'. r o m a n I bath~. \\'alk to bra ch 842-G691. TARBELL General IRVINE 5-8EDROOM • \\'ould you brlif'\'f' a 5 BF:O· r.ooi\r :: BATI I TO\\';..;. II 0 USE": UNIVF:RSJT\' l'Afll\ 1\0 LESS! Srrlud1•f1 alri1u11 cn!ry. Formal li\·ini:: rooin and dining. l\lantlrd 11hilr brick rircptael'. Rf'al gardrn khchPn -w/break- rasl-har. Sr11<1ra!r n1as1rr stU1C'·and b1:;: loo' Plus t.lou· hlr art:u·hrd g<ira~r. pooh., tennis courts an'! l:iike trails~ llurry·call 645.030.1 • IORl.\1 E OlSO:\ '" NEAL TORS FREEDOM REPO :><·a rce 4-Br. 2 Ba. Cornr-r lot "/rol'crC'd patio & brick B·B·Q. Ne1v :::old shag ..:rpt. nc11• paint, nc11• roof, nr1v IVRter line. NE\V BUYEP. l'\F:EDED. SI.JOO do1\TI + C.C. \\"ho's first? $24,450 Newport ,, Fa irview 646·8811 (anytime) P11rndisc rolumn is for you! I j linr~. \days for :; buck.~. General General General 5 ~% LOAN on 2124 College Ave. Drive hy and then tel us show You thf' inside 4 Bedroon1, 2 Ba1h, fil"E'place, FA heat &: many goodirs. Paymts only Sl4S. 1110. includes taxes &: ins, t·uu 1w11·r. $26,950 Newport •• Fairview 646-1811 (anytime) TABLEROCK Sprt'lacula1• vil'\V of brrak1ng SUI'! fro1u llus 2 hf'droom own.your·01\•n apt. Sronf' fircplacr 11rivatc balc.'Ony <:ommunily poof & rrt'realion facllitic11 $66,:JOO REALTORS SINCE 1944 673-4400 EASTSIDE FIXER UPPER POOL \Valk !o \Vestclirr shopping. Popular :1 bedroom home 1vilh hard,vood Door~. 2 balhs. fa n11ly i: o o m, breakfast roon1 , hea v y ~hake roor and sparkling rinol. Na1nr your lerms - illness for<"Ps salr. -$36,500. Call 545--8~24 j Open eves.) $32,500 Garden Home \\'ith most beaut i ful landscaping, lovely patib, nr.atly manicured. c:"Olorrul trees. rlo\\'Crs. 4 bcdl'ooms, 2 pullman balhs. fan1ily 100111 boa!.~ inv iting fireplace. Queen's pridr buil1 ·in kitchen. dish11·ashcr. Gorxeou:~ shag <'arpeting, 10 monU1s ne1v -sho1v!I better 1han a model! 846-060-1. TARBELL Gener.al Gen.rel -IT'S SO NICE- IN IRVINE TERRACE Le t us sho'v you this enchanting home. Atriu1n entry, spacious living room with fireplace and VIEW. 3 Large bedroom with fireplace and VIEW. 3 Large bedrooms 2 bath s, LOVELY DINING ROOM .+ room to store your trailer or boat. $62,500. CORONA DEL MAR CHOICE DUPLEX SOUTH OF THE HIGHWAY -Spacious- idenlical units -3 Bedroom, ,2 Bath, builtin kitchen, FIREPLACE, 1800 sq. ft. Large master suite (16'xl7'). All this and close to the beach too . .. .. . ......... $76,500. "APT". under construction CORONA del MAR Make lhe changes you want NOW. 3 Bed· rooms. 2 baths. builtin kitchen with VIEW OF JETTY. FRONT HOUSE -also has 3 Bedrooms. 2 baths. builtin kitchen, dining atea. fireplace. Now is the time lo buy $77,500. "SPANISH HACIENDA" IN CAMEO SHORES Architect designed -New carpets & drapes. 4 Bedrooms, 3 baths. cathed ral ceiling!; and 2 fireplaces (I with used brick wall ). family room , builtin kitchen & B-B-Q.-guest quar· lers. P L U S MANY XTRAS. Entertain around your O\VO POOL $76,500. 38' OF WATERFRONT AND A POOL TOO??? Pier & slip available. NEW DRAPES & CARPETS. 2 bedrooms, 2\o!i baths, MAR· BLE FIREPLACE, builtin kitchen with WET BAR, patio overlooking the water. See to ap- preciate. $85.000. . .:~ ~~ ,. il ~ •J:lllQw REALTORS 644·7270 Gentrll General FOUR BEDROOMS -SANDPOINTE - All wrapped up in th is nice TWO STORY 4 bedroom, 3 bat h,' HUGE RUMPUS ROOM that will take a pool table, builtin kitchen, large ya rd \vil l accommodate your 30 foot boat, and a spacious feeling prevails thru- out. It's only , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $39,900. DELUXE DUPLEX -CORONA DEL MAR - SOUTH OF THE HIGHWAY -. Spaciou• identical units -3 Bedroom. 2 Bath, builtin kitchen, FIREPLACE, 1800 sq. ft. Large mas- ter suite (16'xl7'), All this and close to the beach too ...................... $76.500. -CAMEO HIGHLANDS - "SPANISH ELEGANCE" Architect designed -New carpets & drapes .. 4 Bedrooms, 3 baths, cathedral ceilings and 2 used brick fireplaces. family room , den. built-in kitchen & B-B-Q. PLUS MANY XTRAS. Entertain around your own POOL. .......... ' ......... ' . ' .. $76,500. CORONA DEL MAR -TWO TRIPLEXES - Built in range and oven, dishwas~er and disoosal, carpets and draues. 2 Units have 2 bedrooms, 1 bath: 1 Unit has ·2 bedrooms, 1112 bath w/fireplace. Each unit has 2 car- ports, maintenance free yard and pool jrivi· leges. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Each $7 .500. OPEN HOUSE DUPLEX • 3 BR. each · 511 Carnalion, Co- rona def Mar. $67,500. Open Sat & Sun 1·5. Gener el EXPERIENCED SALESMAN WANTED Compeny exp•ndlng. Mln1geriel opportunities. C1ll for info. ~ MOASSoCIATlS REALTORS 644-7270 2121 EAST COAST HIGHWAY CORONA DEL MAR, CALIF. -------Gener el 2121 EAST COAST HIGHWAY For Spacious Living CORONA DEL MAR, CALIF. HARBOR No Down VIEW-CAMEO SHORES-POOL $92.500. 4 Lge. bdr1n s., 14Xl5 d ini~g rm .. hi beam$. Eating area in kitchen. Priv. beach. Call i\·tary Lou l\·larion In Mesa Verde l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!-I HIGHLANDS Try this J brdroon1 home on General Gentr•I Cozy entry to huge living for !iize. You "·ill al!'<> enjoy· I---------·-::---:---,..---·! room. Giant fam ily room formal dinini & thr $28,950 EASTBLUFF-with crackling corntr fire· 4 Bedrm • S28, 900 G.L tenns • Lovely lqe family home "°1th elegant firtplace deluxe bu 11 l j n kitchen, dishwasher, r ich wood panelina:. \Vittd for stereo. Patio. Prime Hun- tington Beach lo c ation. 962-1373. LINDA ISLE BEAUTY Elegant cu st. ho1ne V.'/5 BR .. 4 Ba"s .. fri:nl. din. rm. & fan1. rm. \\'/\vet har. Outside stair & deck + dock for 2 boats. S147.500. Al Fink EASTBLUFF DOLL HOUSE Beaut. decorated J BR .. 2 ha. home. l,ovel y lo\v maintenance y~d . Bike to schools. shopping & tennis. \ 't last at this price~ $41.900. ~larriett Davie • PRIVATE BAYSHORES hreaklasl arc.i orr lhc FAMIL y LMNG place. Fonnal dine. Comfy kitchen, Thr properly is 4 BEDROOM kitchen. 3 huge bedrooms furthC'r accented 1'' i I h FAMILY ROOM Rustic 2 1tory !i bedroom "'ilh .shutlered windows! cuz;ton1 drapes. a stone family home 1vith 3 baths. Service porch. 2 patios. Tool fireplace & thif'k shag Fenced-in ·with \\TOught lron AND 2 views! A lovely shed. Room for boat-trailer. carj)('ting. 'fhr C'ntirc price railing, huge 500 square loot park-playground '."·for the Hurry en this r are one! is S42,49.l VHA-VA lenn:i;. covered patio e I~ c tr i c children just acro11s the Call 645-0303 Jnquirt' rurther by calling garage opener. air con-street and panoramic view .>46--231.t ditioned, 4 bedroom, family of !he hill from your back- --~ --~ rm., fireplace, built·in.~. din· yard patio and bedrooms. ing room, b e a u t i f u I Clo.sf! to food schools and landscaping. 540-1720. has a clock thenno~tat to turn on the heat so you wakt up toasty 1varm on I OKISI L OI ~O\ #fAiTOl<C, 1-~------- TARBELL Sfe this one and appreciate ill'i R'ood location and 4!!!X- celle11t condition. \Vlth 3 bedrooms and 2 ba.thl'i plul'i ltii beautiful landscaping General A UNl ()Uf: fi()ML A COLOR PHOTOGRAPH from the front of· this 4 bedroon1 Corona del friar beach 'house \Vil! have ocean blues. sunny skies, garden greens \\·ith just a tou~h of \Vhile sails and bright flo,ver s. Forty foot lot \vith spaciou~ liv in g roo1n. bric k patio and formal dining room . Son1e fini shing touches needed but excellent chance for a fu n (and ,soun~) in· vestment. Offered al $75,000. PHONE UNIQUE CORONA DEL MAR , 67:0- 6000. REALTOR, MULTIPLE LISTING SIRVICE. ' ofltida ..911/, PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT 11 Linde Isle Drive Compl etely furn. 5 Bdrm., 4'h bath home. Lge. \Vaterfront living rm. with floor to cell. marble frplc. Formal dining rm., family rm., maid's rm ., Pier & slip ........... $185,000. For Complete I nformetion On All Homes & Lots, Pl1e11 Call: BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Boysldo Dr., Suito 1, N.B. 67$.61'1 U>tn•r•I SHOW HOME EASTSIDE Unmislakenly fabulou!! aparkUna: pool, I a v I s h landscaping, 3 o v e r 1 i z e. bedrooms, 2 baths, aorreous built-in kitchen. Home i~ ahsolu!ely Im mac ul• te throughoul. Take a look. $36,500. Red C a r p e t Realtors. 546-8640. *FIXER UPPER * Attention bargain hunter!'i! Best for the money 3 bed· roon1 home "'ilh 2 bath,;, family room. firr-placc, !'ihake shingle roof, double garare and swing around cement drive. XJnt r~si· dr.ntlal loca!ion and only $27,000, Subm it FliA or VA term!! -best hurry. eau 545-8424 (Open evs.) STUNNING IS THE WORD ••• For lhb1 2 bclnn., dt11, 2 bath home with an extra p&n11ed retreat room. BtautlfuUy decorated I: landacaped. Prime park loca.Uon. Walk to ahopplnr A church. For thl'! moat dl1erlmlnaUna buyer. Juat reduced f8 136,9'0. PAD AD Ide.al location for bachelor or hide away. Sharp aa a tack J bedroom home wJth pluah carpels and drape!, Wu~r. dryer, and rtfrlre.ratDr tn. eluded in this low price of $lS,9:ict. Ideal JocaUon elole. to pool &: rte room. At this price, why rent! Call Walker & Lee Realtors 2700 Harbor Blvd. at Adami J4.'i-046j Open E~L Sand v beaches. big trees. F'amily area. Let me s·hov.• you thi!i 4 BR . J Ba . ho me. Cozy Cape Cod with brick frplc . Only Sj9 ,500. Lavera Burns DANDY DUPLEX $34,000 TARBELL 2955 Harbor. Costa ~lesa chiJly mornlnas. S55.950. STEPS TO BEACH C. F. Colesworthy 3 BR. '"'Y. R<e•ntly decor. and tniit tree!I. It adds up to ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; a grtat buy for only $25,500. TOPS IN EVERY I UNITS-POOL & VIEW Upper NP\\'port Gay loc. Recen.ll y painted & in xlnt cond .. \v /a1nplc park in g. O\vner say• sell~ Call for details. !144,000. M. C. Bu ie LIDO ISLE TWO AD.JOI NING LOTS, street lo street location . .S!cps lo private beach & private · club. $78,500. Edie Ol son BAYSHORES-VACANT Absentee o,1,,nc1· says "sell" -~nJoy pr!v. beaches. boa ting & year 'round 1Jv1ng at !t s best. 3 DR. \I' ove rsize fam . rm. 546.950. ~·lary Jl arvey OCEANFRONT-LAGUNA BEACH Approx. :V.1 acre. beaut. terraced ga rd ens surrou nd lovely. l,l:!C. split level home: htd . S\vim pool & spac. house. 5teps do,vn to priv. be<jCh. $290.000. Kathryn Raulston CAMEO SHORES 1. Oceanfront. e le~a nt 4 BR. 5112 ba 5340.000 2. Very l~e .. beaut. 6 BR. lib .. 6\o!i ba !2211,000 Bo th ho1nes have patios & pool s. Carol Tatum PENINSULA BAYFRONT r.rcat potential in this corner Joe. 42' Lot on IV. Bay, 3 BR . & I-BR. ~!t. suite. 4 Ba. (!m . for lg . boat & beaut. patios. $199.500. Eugene Vreeland UJ.0700 --Coldwell,Bankar 644-2430 ~ SSO NEWPORT CENTER DR'., N.B. "Howard" where are You? Lost something? F'ind it, Sharp 2 lx'dnn.. 2 bath place an ad! fi42-56i8. studio-tyJ)f' duplrx, in xlnt G I & Co. Realton near new carp .. Open beam .............. c•lls: large pat)(!. $33,900. Eastbluff Office """"""" CAYWOOD REALTY 646-7171. 1-01 THE REAL \'"'\[ ESTATERS 675,.4;30 ~Ba;:Y::':::;•::•.;Ofl;.:::.k::•c.... ____ I * 541-1290 * Venere1 ' . . ~· l't'ntal area. The"r. arc enera really hard to !ind . C111! no1vl------------------ lor appl. to !lee. 642-1771. $28,500. Charn1ing :i hE'droon1, 2 hath homr, (!Uiet North Costa ~l~11a Jocalion. Coty lire· pfacr, rully rarpelrd, all hu11l1oi; and frP11hly paintcrl. .Just hsted, srlltr \\'iii help \\'Ith llnanclng and sell for a~ low as SSC. down. Call 54.>-8424 (Ope n Evs.) \outh . (. oast --. ''6 '' BEDROOMS For the l•rac family hett t1 1M1 homt you'v" been look· ing for 6 bedt'l).,ms, family room with flreplace plus an extra den Ups1ain. l.oclted on a cul-de-sac 1trttL Wtlk to ocran and IOlf counr. Thll 11 a Prtstl~ home 111 a pre11titl'! !!Itta. Only 146,950. Ca.II 341..f!OIO. :-o THI:: RE/\L \""\,. f.STATf.RS MACNAB IRVINE -------"'·------- FINER HOMES TWO BAYFRONT LOTS Illness forces drastic price reduction. Utilize existing 8 BR hou&e or demolish for 2 new bayfront homes. Gloden Fay for appt. -642-8235. Price now -f.!15 ,000. BALBOA ISLAND BAYFRONT Pier -float, duplex. seller wlll lease ~ck apt. for 10 years. $155,000. UNIVERSITY PARK -BEST BUY Professionally upgraded 3 BR, den. High bea m ceilings -central air cond. -pri .. vale heated pool. Super landscaping! $44 ,950. Laszlo Sharkany 644-6200. [ Irvine I -1n1 .. 11oonrc.,.,.,., IOI DoM l>fl'lo 141·tUI 1144 Moc:41111or '44·1200 Ntwport-... ch, CIJlforNli tnn Gener el MODEL HOME FOR SALE RAC9UET CLUI IN IRVINE $43,950 The beautiful WEMBLETON. Four bedrooms. formal di ning room, sep-• arate family room with wet bar and fireplace. Air conditioned. Upgraded ... carpet.I throughout. Lavish use of ex· pensive wallpapers. Best quality drap- erie.. Co mpletely landscaped. Fenc- ed. Ju&t one block to park and tennis courts. Located on Culver Road, north of lhe Santa Ana Freeway. Open doily r ... m 11 a.m. lo ' p.m. Tolophono 132·S762 EASY LIVING Thi.~ Is It! Live hia:h at low cost -in this cute. con- dominium home 2 bedrooms, den &: 2 baths - complete with wrought iron bl.loony. Just a i;;hort stroll to clubhouse I: pool, Stt this deliahttul home at only $20,950. Vacant, ready to move In. Call 5"~1151 fOpen eves.) ' HERITAGE . . REALTORS $31,000 • No Down C.T. tennl -Low down all othen~ 4 s paciou t bf'droom,, 2 baths. large fam i l y room boa1ls handsome fl~pla«. buillin dream kitchen, diahwa.sher. Deeply }NLdded wall to wall c-.rpe.Ong, drape.a I: pretty ahu tltn. Palio. Pool sized rrouncts~ Brk. 96:z..5666. TARBELL WATCH' YOUR WIFE lier eyea 1wiU light up when •he leflr'lhla Family Home. Very '11aek>u1 8 /f Cu Kllchftl and a yvd that al· low"a her to know wlltn lM chlldrtn are. 4 Bdrm•, 2 Bath•. Fermat Dinlns Rm. fHA-VAW.500-- Evt:nlngs Call 646-9102 COLWELL PROPERTl[S. INC REALTORS RESPECT \\'hat family ll'Ollldn't take. a shine. to lhl1 tine ll)lltil:linJ clean 4 Bedroom, 2 bath home on a quiet cul-de·HC ltrer.t in Eastbluft. Conven- ient to school& A ahopplnc centr.ra. Beautifully land· acaped and paOo. BJt.lna. Only $47,500. Call now 67~8550. I&_, 'THE REAL ESTATERS ' " ., " ' ' Add The Numbers 4 MJNUTES TO THE F'REE\VA YS. • MINUTES TO OCC. 9 mlnutts 10 the OC'tan. 5 minutes to major ~hoppine. O minult• ta bu.:<! pool in the back yard. ThAt'll righ! • S4t9.j() for beautltuJ cusro:i.t home on cul-de-sac street in Newport Stach~ Walker & Lee ~al ton »iJ \Vtstclltt Dliv• ~7Tll Open 'IOI 9 PM TRUST THIS AD Do you like llvtni cloH to the be.achT Thia homt ta tor you. 4 bedroom, 2 be.Iha. spacklua home tui.s a ~of a park that will rive )'OU that spirit of oot Cf doort llvtnr. II'• J)l'lce ti or,ty 141.!IOO, Cllll.9d>ly. 112·25». iZ Tl!i. Fl ·\I !""!""''. • ' \ j • • • DAILY PILOT General READ THIS LA CUESTA HOMES, cloH to th• ocun In Huntington Beach -has one credit r• ' jection in their 9th Unit -•t original ' price! Occupancy in June. UNIT 11-NO>W OPEN Homes have -4 & S BR., 2 & 3 BA, shake roof a, etc. Gener•I wet bars, full builtins, carpeting, Set the Models et Brookhurst & Atlantr. from $36,440 96'-2929 General IRVINE TERRACE lla ndy lo Irvine Country Club, also beach. Original O\vner. Adull occupied, \Veil 1naih- tained. 3 BR., 2 baths, dining rm., frpl c. Attr. \Vood exterior. $84,900. UPPER BAY-5 BDRMS. Xlnt value in this attr. Back Bay 5 BR .. 3 Bath home. Paneled family rm . \V/wet bar. Formal dining rm.; many · custom features that lend to the charm. $65,000. Smal\ Pnough to know you. Large enough to sl'rvc you. 675-3000 m BAY & BEACU REALTY - VALUE PACKAGE 4 + FAM. In Co!lla !'\lc511'g n1 o Ii I dt'sirablc llrca. P1-e1H iKIOUll !\1esa Vrrdc, p l ush carpeting, !\ll?dallion huill·in kllchen, hr\t•k fircplaCf'. 4 bedrooms, t baths. ooverrtl 11a110, Beauliful ~«.:k yard Can't be bea t an)'\-\'hf'l'f! Ill IO\\"n flt $33,250, Red Garpet "Realtors. J..!6-8&10. SAVE $2,600 DOLLARS 0\.\r'W'r must m<lVe so you f'lln ir;av.-many dollars on this ln\·('!y llil\'l'll Cliff llomr. 3 hf'r!1'()(11n", 2 bath~. ramily run1n tlfJ.d f'xtra room ,1n the i;:arai::e Jor Ith . hl'droon1 or Mhhi1's. 11 can't 111.st at lliis prier, onl.Y $36.900. Phone ~dG-'.!:ll3 ·rod11~ ~ 4 BEDROOMS -10% DOWN- Collrge Park bra uty. I...ari;:c hrdrms., 2 haH1i;;, huge liv- ini:: r o o 111 1\•/rireplacf'. Ovrrlooking brautiful ya.I'd. Bu1lt in!', rlhl, gar .. patio. CALL ANYTIME 646-3928 or 675-1827 Lachenmyer Realtor --.-527,500-.-- :; Rn., 11 :: ha. Dhl. garage. J luge bal'k yard, Nea1· New· porl Jfcights grammar r;chool, l'iose to r;hopping. O\vner '''ill consider VA/ 1".11.A. tf'rms. Cati 673-366.1 642-2253 eves. associated BROKERS--REALTOAS 2025 W lolboo 67J~J66J OCEAN VIEW m 'U""" '"' "•"Cl' ••I" ""'' ,.,. BC'aur iful eus!u1n hotn" ln ''""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""'' N!'11 ~r! lleii;:hts "·i 1 h 3 General sparious bedrooms, 2 large General Spiffy 4 Bedroom 3112 Years Old Take over subject lo 6~& an- nual percentage rate VA loa.n -$217.00 month lolal pay1ncnt. Be a u Ii Iu I Jy upgraded home, s h a g carpel, antique m irrors, private cul-Oe-sac lot. Ask- ing $31,450. Red Carpet P.eallorll. M6-864(). ---------·I baths. sparkling hal"d\\'00(\ HOW ABOUT .POINT LOMA? floors a n d ma.i.:nificl·,,1 kitchen, Exrt!p lio n al l:lndscaping 1vi1h h<'autiful 'This is a beautiful 'hcnne flo11crs and shn1h!'. 139,ij(}. overlook1n,ll' rtll of &In w lk & L Diego. Coronndo anti \\'or!11 a er ee Islri.nd. No l'xpcnscs \\'CJ'(' Rell.Hors sp111·Pd in ronslruction. ""I' 11. I II D . k. lh' -.,. _, = ma 1ng 1s .an auu..,nt1c fi-16-7711 n....n 'fl! 9 m copy of a v1ll;i on Lake _ _ .,,~ P Corna. A Nf'\\'porl Beach cw.·ncr wanli> action -and might t.'Oll!'iic~r a trade for TRIPLEX Ideal incon1e propC'rty. Call Very nice 3 BR, 2 BA 0\11ne1•'s 6T:r722.i unit + 2.2 BR 1 BA. Good COLWELL Jocalion. $51,500. PROPERTIES, INC. REALTORS Roy McCardle Realtor ~~~~~~~ ;;..-...-......... -.,.-----• J 1810 Ne\\'!)()rf Blvd., C.i\I. Lived In A Little HERE'S A 548-7729 But Loved A Lot REAL GEM Thi:ii single story stucco, 3 s kl ' 4 •-d f 1 .. r "'" ·~ "'""'· om'" SPECIAL VALUE bedroom homf' has just the roo1n. lO'x18' s c r ('en e d space )'OU necrl at a pr\« aluminum lan;u. fireplace. BAYCREST -~ Bedrooms you can afford. 2 sparkling full builrins i n c I u d i n g and family 1001n, t\\'O in1· bath!<. all eleclri<' kitchen, disl11v<1 shc1·, 11e'v Sf'ars \'tnyl pressive raised hearlh fire- carpe1s and dr<ipes 1hruou t. fl oor Jn ki! & fan1ily rn1. -places, pool size yard \vi!h Double garagf'. Only 2'~ Off1'rerl 1\1lh tTl1\ or no O\'l'rsized doublr garage in yt!ars old anri pricrd al do1-1·n \I A 1r rn1s of rour~. lht• back. Priced lr.rtv at $32.900. F11A and GI buyers l"ull price only SJI, ij(). S;'JCi,0011. \\'Clcomf', Call Call 51()...1151 f0JX'n Eve~. PETE BA·RRETT Walker & Lee -REALTY- Realtors 2790 Harbor Blvd. al Adarns :J:l.~9~91 Opc-'11 Eve~. Mediterranean Pleasure -~HERITAGE . • REALTORS REBUBLIC TWO STORY 2 YEARS YOUNG 642-5200 -FH,;;;-V~A LITTLE PAINT and r.on1e elbo\v grease \.\•ill rure this \Veil built. Eastsidt Cosla !\1esa 3 Bdrm lfon1r. NEED SOME INCOME? * PARADISE * . Spacious hilltop h o me ~~is _4 Unit bulldlna: ~s ~al w/Ruper \•Jew of octan & pride cf o\\·nerMlp \v11h "'all<'y thru \\all~ ot gl;1~s. lovely ca;petl'i & dr~!)f's, lln~ )'our private dnvc thru 2 + IC1nc.l1W:a~1ng and air· <:O~l-acres of trees & na ture, l~nlng '".the upper uni~. Pnds at !his special 3 BR, \\alk .10 south Coao:I Plaza 2~t ba., den, plui; huge din-~pp1ng .. Call to 5ee ho\v ing & family rm. home. lh1s bcaul1ful 2·year 4-plcx Close 10 m1trina. $129,9.;0 • can liave ~axes for YoU next Xlnt terms. ,. .. r. A'k'"• !1S,OOO, BOND REALTY COATS 32325 So. Coast H"'Y· & {Al Three Arch Bay! WALLACE * 499-2238 * REALTORS East Bluff -!4&-4141-1-------- IOpon Even;n•1) * DOLORES * . • One o! 1he n101>l lu.xuriou~ """"""'""''"'"'"'""''""""''homes in the Bluff s. BARGAIN OF ''"'"" 3 BR .. 3 Ba .. b<I· THE YEAR ter than ne\\.', \\1th upgl'aded c11.rpet'I, drapes & fix Uu"es. This 3 bedroom, 2 bath \Vet bar in dining mi.; cMrmer has bu i It -1 n s. beautilul greenbelt vie\v, AJf/f11,f intercom, new May 1ve show YoU this".' i;hag carpets, huge rencM MORGAN REAL TY yard and ~ co v t' r r d 673-6642 67S-6459 flagstone pal10 \\'Ith BBQ.1---------- Assume a loan \\ilh $203 Fountain -Valley monthly paymrnts fo r only S3i00 rlo"'n. I\'o qualifyin~. Prire S2:i,700. Rush for thi~ one. ~12-2;'3.i. Ac:res of Green + 2 Pools 3 master bedroom homr. 2 ni<'e sized baths, strp do"'" Jiving room, formal dining roo1n, iitep.saving kitchl'n. Not a •·condo". Over 1600 STRETCH OUT "'· 11· ~'"500· All '"'"'· ;, •h;, '""'Y • hcdroom Walker & Lee !\lcsa Verde home. Featur- ing -snch appointments ai> all rlecl!'ic ki1che11, r a mi I y Rcalton1 f>46-1751 rootn, 2 hath~. upgraded -----... iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii .. carricts and .1..'0VelY'd patio. MEADOW HOME Great Jocal1on cloSl! lo ') ~ehools. New on the market $32,800--4 BR, .. BA. new shag and only $.'{2.~. Call us for crpls & driv.;. H a_ s fttrther de I ails. 5 4 6-5 8 8 (} as..~_umab!e loan or ''iii <Open Evf's. I rcf1nal'ICf'. Sharp ho U s e : good .area. Near F.V, I-fl School. Only $1640. dn. I' ~~HERITAGE REALTORS 1llage Real Esta te .......... ~ ... -"""'~""' 531·5!00 ( ::::.) 531·5800 Eastbluff Spec:ial ~ ~- A lovely 4 bedroom home on BY 0\VNER, 4 BR, 13{ BA., a quiet cul-de-sac. Spread fam. rm. shag cpl., 1800 sq. over 1900 square feel, you Jt. $31,500 963-2146 or l213J iind a bright kitchen withi~"-,...~"-'~· -~-~-­ all the extras. An adjoining Huntington 8e1ch 'lining room. Beauti fu l ___.. · landscaping add 10 a great CLOSE TO THE huy at onlY $47,500. &IB-7171. BEACH * MESAVERDET By Q\\'ner. 3 BP., 1'2 BA. A ~r<'a1 3 bcdroon1 hon1f' \vilh a lovely srcluded yal'rl, localed al rhe enrl or a cul- rlr-saC', close to schools, ideal tor a young family and only S24,j()(). crpts., drps. :iw Sumatra PAYMENTS LESS Plal'e, $27,000. 545-6328. THAN RENT Bayshores Lovf'ly 3 bedroon1 home 1vith fireplace, sla1e en I l' y , 3 BR., 2 Ba., din rm. cust. CU!l.lom carpets & drapes, rrpt/shulters & drp~. J::lec kit Lolll Lse. hold. 67;)...{)!WI). lan;e ram ily room, eleclTic kitchen and bui!!ins, largf' Corona del Mar pa!io, pr o f t's s io n ally -~-,.-""°--:-c""°--J landscaped tropical yard. Harbor View Hills .Ff.IA/VA \velcomc. Tibu11ln n1od1•l \\'/custom pool, lu.~h lndscpg, naturR.I PANICSVILLE rock 111alcr fall & carp pond. Ilas already 1noved R.nd1\·irc 3 hr, 2~~ ba, fain rm. for· ii; really gelling anxious. maJ din 1111, 2 rrplC', ruslom Large 4 bedroom. 2 story dC'sign, cleco~ator drapci> & honll'! \vi!h rormal dining \Vallpa~r. $!8,500. 644·51T.l. area and large family rou1n. Open Sun, l ·:i. 1400 Seacrest Only $29.9-JO. Dr. · Call :->'10-s:~'},j BY OWNER-SHERWeeD REAL TY !!ARBOR VI E\V HILLS 189&1 Brookhurst, F.V. Lusk "Sa"dp;per" -4 BR. $ I C h $ 21,~ BA, Fam rm. 2 frpls, nstant GS din. area, prof. landscaJ)E'd-for your «111ity. \Ve pay costi>. crpts-drp~·S67,500. e 644-2069 24 hr. serv. 847-8507 eves-Sat/Sun U.S. AFFILIATED Costa Mesa B1'0ke1"s Realty LlnLE JEWEL BY o"'""· • BR, 2 aa .. '••· Ea!'lside shady SI. n r . \\'estcliff. :I BR. lgt'. kit. Nil't'ly drcol'alrd, lovely patio, $.'.0.950. TRY THIS rumpus roon1, i>hag crpL, drps, hltns, rlsh\vshr., auto ~pr1nklcrs. 21 ~ car all. ~Rragc. Clo~e 10 school!! .t shopping. SJl,9j(}. l 6 5 2 1 fountain Ln. Open Sal. & Try 10-;D rln . or lease/option. Sun. 1-:i. 8~2-1691 SlOOO _& $~/mo. Charming O\\'NER 4 BR, 3 tile BA; liv. Eastsule hke TW'W 3 BR, 2 d' I 1·1e I BR · h rm, in rn1, am rm, 1 Ba. ii a:iiter 1~ uge kitchen 1 mi to beach, cul- Y>/frplc. !..gr. rooms. Alll'y de-Mc. ,$41,500. 968-5782 access. $31,91Xl. CALL ·e · 646 •J414 9.~.~llL Nt•r Nrwporl Po ~I orritt Thi!' spacious 5 bcdrooin ""ilh a courtyard l'nlry hornc. A hugl' living roon1 \\ iTh vaulted ceilin~ and a large adobe fircplac:c plus an a•I· joining dining l"OOnl -2l2 baths -a large backyal"<l - great localion -and a ll for only $49,500 · See ii today. 6-16-il 71. ]~~Bath.~. Dining: Room and "Nr\\ horn!? \u,\:ury" \l'ilhout a ~tcp Saver Kitf'hl'!n. All North Costa Mesa lhr in~'Qrl\'Cn1cncr! E\•cry-r $""""" ,.~,. """""" 3 BR., 2 BA. Lar,c living 10THEREAL '~ ESTATERS "' ·. . .,.,. Government Repo $500 Down r11\l pritt SZl,JOO. An}'one f., eligihlf' to buy th(:\ 3 t)l'(]roonl homP. Nlee loca- tion. in gOOll rondilion. Complrtcly carpt>IC'd, ~·ith largP lot. Room Jor boat or tmilP:r. 546-5880 •O(X'n 1 \'r~.) ·.1 •· HERITAGE , • REALTORS I rl I I ~ · c1·n1s ""•".iu. Vt<>·"'"""· t 11ni;fs het•n one a l'C31 y. .. room, frplc. New i;hag cpts llNh'OOm.~. forn1al •lining .~ vinyl oo 1rax tile. Ne11· roon1, bt•rakrast area in !he ctisli\vashcr. CovC'rrd palio. kilrhen, l:trgr Jamily room. ROttm for boat or r1·ailcr. 2 fireplal.-eS and cathedraJ Nr. s .o . Fr.1.·y., rlol',C lo beamed ceiling!!. Spacious s hopping $28.900. 51 I•, loan. home for larg.-family. Call Sh S 11 963-2178. f"6-2Jl31o '""· opper topper .. 1 -~N=E~A=T~&~V~A~C~A~N~T~ $950. DN. REPOSSESSION r antaslil' 3 bf><lroom, -i · bath homr -frr!!hly paintl!'d, ne"·ly c11rpc-!cd, all bu!llins, family roo1n, double garage 11"'1 l'."<cellrnt residt>ntiaJ l•X"~l!ion. A must to 5l'e • l29.9:JO. (~ll &4;,...342-1 (Qf~n CV~.) It's an immaculale adult oc- cupied honie. 4 bedrooms. 2 Spotlrss. spacious 3 BR. on baths a nd an intercom quiet 11trcet. Hd11·d. flrs, system. A beautiful dichon-plush carp. 10% Down! Jra lav,.n \llith ~prinklers ---GEM--· front & re11r. Only $.14 ,500. 1610 \Y. Coast HY:y., N.B. Call 817-6010 !or more in· REALTORS 642-4623 formntio11, Toda1y, lo\THEREAL \'"\l ESTATERS -. ,)Of'< !'<fl[~ p~ $24,500 4 Bdr + 2 Baths i\fESA ~I i\lar. 4 lge. BR, 2 BA, fan1 ily rm .. 1800 r.q . ft .. palio w/roVT~r. sprinklers fronl & baek, M-W crpl. $36,000 01\'n<'r. 5 4 6 .. 0 6 3 3 prin. onl~i. 4 BDR...\l. REPO. E. Side-frplc, hugi lot, 3 rar gar. J lake offer, under $.l'.)).f. \\liJJs Re s I ! y , 5M>-7739. UAKE OFFER BAYCREST BEAUTY -REDUCED $4,500 Bc.au!lful ho1nr. dream kitch- r n "'•lh hulll·ln range & oven + di!!:hWM.,hrr, dinning roorn, l'nlry hall, patio, brk, 540-lTiO. TARBELL BY Owner • Lovcly 3 BR, !pl., cor lot. rm for boal, camper 2835 Portola Dr. 546-1031. Nttt 1.g a. pin 3 bdnn .. Elepnt. lm1nac. 4 B1-.. i· The DAILY PILOT ORA'NGE COAST'S GR.EAT LOCAl'lON on ramily rm.~ home w/larcr 2955 ffarbor, Collla ~1esa V.A. REPO. ! BR. 1 Ba. I d' Eutltde. .Aakine • $27.500. lonnJJ din. rm. ~.O'XJ. $21,500 to $500 ON. S88 i\10. ea 1ng -IBA loon bollll>C<, BALBOA BAY PROP. Autlmf..,J Broktr !HU.10 481 ll7' RIR ALL * 642-7491 * BA YFRONT j c.a Wi 1---"-----"--IChvmlng 3 Br, 2 Ba. Condo. Put a litUe "loot" in your M k I -~ TM lu.ltJI draw fn tho Pool, pier A slip -$79,500. J.AWi--ltll ttme babies for ar etp ace \\•ut. , .a Daily P J I o I TED ftUBERT It AS~. "bucks". C&ll Claullled . Clwlfiod Ad. OO-S671. Mil Via Lido 675-85111 su.<i618. '-'--'------- Are You Letting Cash Slip Through Your Fingers See If You Have Any Of These Things A DAILY PILOT WANT-AD 1. Stove 2. Guit1r 3. Baby Crib 4. Electric S1w S. Camera 6. Wisher 7. Outboard Motor 8. Stereo Set 9. Couch 10. Clarinet 11. Refriger1tor 12. Pickup Truck 13. Sewing Machine 14. Surfboard 15. Machine Tools 16. Dishwasher 17. Puppy 18. Cabin Cruiur 19. Golf Cort 20. Barometer 21. Stamp Collection 22. Dln•ll• S•t 23. Play Pon 24. Bowling Ball 25. Water Skis 26:. FrHier 27. Suitcase 28. Clock Will Sell Fast! 29. Bicycle 30. Typewriter 31. Bar Stools 32. Encyclopedia 33. Vacuum Cleaner 34. Tropic1I Fish 35. Hot Rod Equipm't 36. File Cabinet 37. Golf Clubs 38. Sterling Silver 39. Victorian Mirror 40. Bedroom Set 41. Slide Projector 42. Lawn Mower 43. Pool T•bl• 44. Tires 45. Pi1no 46. Fur Coit 47. Drapes 48. Linens 49. Horse SO. Airplane 51 . Organ 52. Exercycle SJ. Rare Books 54. Ski Boots SS. H;gh Choir 56. Co ins 57. Electric Tr1in 51. Kitten 59. Classic Auto 60. CoffH T•blo 61 . Motorcycle 62. Accordion 63. Sk;s 64. TV S•I 65. Workbench 66. Diamond Witch 61. Go-Kart 68. Ironer 69. Camping Tr1iler 70. Antique Furniture 71 . Tape Recorder 72. Sailbo•I 73. Sporto Car 74. Mattress Box Sf19S 7S, Inboard Spoetlboat 76. Shotgun 77. S•ddl• 78. Dart Game 79. Punching Bag 80. Biby Carri1ge 81 . Drums 82. Rifle 83. Desk 84. SCUBA GHr These or any other extra things around the house c:an be turned into c:ash with a DAILY PILOT WANT-AD so Don't Just Sit -There! DIAL DIRECT 642-5678 , ,, \ I I ' 4 v I '6 ( •' d b .. f a ol co Re 2 3& "' h do cl Ro ()" ' " 96 VA k be ty " " " I I • • • r> • !4 " ,_ ~ Totsd•Y. M•) •. l!J7Z DAIL v PJLO r ~ -~ -------- IL-[ -_ ... s.i__,. l ~I '-__ .. _u.__,]~ [ _ ..... I~ ~, -~ ... ~ ... ~. I ~~~ ~I -~~ ... -:~1~~1 -'"-.'' __ ...... _~· •;,,,.;r~;..·· r _ .. M. ___ .. _, .... _,· l~~~l l Huntington Beach EVERYTHING NEW 4 BR + 2 BA $27,990. Featurts NE\V pa int in anrl our and QUl NE\V Sha& carpet. cozy f!rPplac•, hlf!n RIO. and it'i; ]l'){'ll!t>d on a J()vf'ly tree-l111erf &•rePt. Ir's tn nunt conrl111nn' Submit yriur !Prn1s, Call 847-1221. PALATIAL PALACE TRI-LEVEL 5 BR + 3 BA $37,000. Big pool i11ze Jot. plus crpu & drps. x1ra large king su.e master bedroom suitP, all push h u t ton appliances, FOR'.\IAL OINl/'\G Area . Subn11r )our 11.'rm~. Call 847-12'2\. Irvine END THE SEARCH We have a 3 bdrm . 2 ba. 1ov•nhouSP 1111h all the things )Ou'i·t been looking for. Panf'll'd <f .. n. sunny aev. 1ng roo1n. d1111ng 1'001n, JovpJy 11·allpaper and pal!('I 'Mith bu1/r.1n BBQ. Lorati>d near poo!it And t e n n 1 s courts. Pr1rf'rl a! only $49,500. (ired hill REALTY Unn·. Park Cen!FT, Jn·int Call Anytime. S33--08~ NICE 2 Sty Turtlerock 4 BR .. 3 BA , fam. nr. schl~. 1880:> Tailor. 011•nr. 833-2929 171.tl &ach Slid .. H.B. l...iO.ii..0..0.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii..., I Laguna Beach IDEAL LIVING \\'by not enjoy hfe. You v.·atch the l.akers 11·in &~ let r.on1eone else paint & cut the gtass. 1·BR. CONDO $1:i.500 f'P $600 nio\'E'·in: 2 BR. CONDO S21.950. Pymt. incl's. PITJ & maint $195; 3 BR . CONDO $20.950. Ex· ist1tig 5', ... ;. loan: 4 BR. CO~OO $22.500. SG:JO On. Xl nt lor. Belore you buy. tl"-''e all the !actr.. Call ro see 11·ha1 thC1usands of fam1!1es are doing. Pymts. less tha n rrnt nn all the Abo\·e. 1llage Real Esta te TEMPLE HILLS 2 Bdrms., 11 1 baths. fa mily room, 11·ood bu ·r n in i fireplace, 11·ith panora:m1c ocean & city vi e11•s. Beaut ilull~· landscaped & in PE'rfect conrlltion. Best buy in the ::u·ea; al S::i2.~. • ..AG tan REAL ESTATE 1190 Glenneyre .St. 494-94i3 549-0316 * JUST LISTED * Ckran V1P11. B"aut. 3 Bdrm .. 2 bath IYimP, "' lorm;il d1n- 1ng & fan11ly nns. L1v1ng Newport &each Commtrci•t Property H __ ou_-_F_u_r_n_llhod ___ 300_ Houses Unfurn. 30S Housts Unfurn. 3QS Apt. Unfurn. 36S Apt. Unfu rn. 365 Bilbo• Island Huntincton &11th Ntwport Beach General G •n1ral 151 BAYFRONT, PIER First T ime Offered C:O..st Hwy, Corona dtl ?-far Charmin& 5 BR beach hOme 3 Com.mt>rcial & duplex on u.ndy &hore. Exrlttn1 $95,000 O\\'C TD~7~i '7e harbor action choice lncalt. E. 17th St., Costa M111 230! Bayside Dr. $168,000 Top location. lo1 do11.·n By Appcnntment 11.5'1.t Spendable return LARGE 1 BDRM. Ove.r 11ara1e.. FuUy furnlahed \\' lots of charm &. privacy. $175. on )'Par lrase or 1um- mer rental. NU-VIEW RENTALS 673-4030 •or 494·3243 Ted Hubert 675-8500 Realonomicz; Bkr. 675--6700 Corona del Mar PANORAMIC VIEW Dupl1xt1/Unit1 -·------- Btaut. maintained home sale 162 1 BLOCK BEACH 2 Bedrooms & lar&e family Attractive 2 BR, 2 BA hou1t. rm. Poot. $64.500. l\tESA VERDE fully furnished. Xlnt Joe Georg• Williamson Kt\\' 3 BR .• 2 Ba .. 2 Br., t*ti G.uage I.. lovely patio. $2.;0 Realtor Ba. Blt·Ut!.. di!h11a.shf'r. yf'arly. 548-6570 645-1564 •h•i ''"· d'l'•· lrpl< .. l NU.VIEW RENTALS car., J car space -Pri fen('-67J.-.4030 or 494-3248 By O wner-Westcliff ed yards, patio • 1 blk to DELUXE rool blue 11•a1m · Charminr rrench Country Bank & Shopping. Xlnt !oc. 2 Br. hm. '.\lo~·t no11" l\bmt>, 5 BR, 3 BA, sunlit Call be.fore 9 am or aft 9 Ren_t-A·House 979-8430 gl.!lss garden room opening pm. Principals: o n l y . lo tatucl!f:I patio &: gardf'n. :>46-2iST. Co1t1 Mesa RE"duced to S~.000. J\fUST 2 DUPLEXES. Xlnt rond. -,-.-R-.-,-ur-,-,.-.,.-.---- SELL'.! 642-63?.o. $30.500. ea. Costa '-lesa.. Adul!s only. ~~!. ~~: Owner. 54S-969J. J.1&-2134. Newport Heights 2 HOUSES BY O\VNER. Income Property 166 own." llq"M•"0• ''."' Rare CdM Triplex pertll!S. 3 BR Sparush charnier . Rem 0 d e t t'rl, Righi 1n ~I! center of to111\, redecorated. Beaut. loc. oonvl!n1tnt to shOps and $36 000 slorea, ther~ ts a very sohd ' · !r1plt>:< of two bPdroom 3 BR rustic ranch home. Remodeled & tedf'c. + COJ)' pE'r plumbing. hPa1:y J1hl'lkl! roof + much more. $37.950. Sfc'e: anytiine · or open house Sun. 11-4. 64Hl9J days, 6i3-16:JX l'l'PS. 3 BR. Vacant. R-2 room to builrl. $29,900. Age nt. un11s. 1t !ron!s on a qu1el strePI, anrl ii \\Ould be an ldf'al home, plus incoml!' for the inves!n1t>nt minded cou- p!P. Call 67~722.l. COLWELL PROPERTIES, INC. REALTORS 675--01--14 6-l&-7.t14 ----- San Clement• 6 Units Eastbluff ~E\\'PORT BEACH Laguna Beach 1 BR w /FRPLC Roomy & charn11rii dplx .. exceptionally 11roJl-lurn11h· ed, garagl! k yard. Jdl'al location. NR. lo~rn & bf'ach. s1sn. NU.VIEW RENTALS 67J.-.4030 or 494-3248 Newport Beach • Vacation Yr rounrl -!Br, steps to bf'arh. Sl30 ALA Rentals • 645-3900 e Yu1)1· t uni . 2 Br. mobill! on bay, ch1Jd 1,;ml pel, snils. all ull inc. S220. •\VE havt a lati• stlecuon ot 3 and 4 bedroom homes that can be moved into almost lmmadiately on our Rent-Opt io n plan. SHER\\'OOD R E A LT 'i , 541).8555 3 BR. 2 BA .. elect bltUt RIO. FA hr .. crprs. 60'x100 ' tncd lot, dbl car .. lndscpd. \'A· cant . movr 1n today. S22j pPr mo. Aaent. 962-4-ln or 546-8103. A CREAGE -keep l<1 rm an1mlllt.. 3 Br , 2 Ba., gilr .. kldi/~IS. Rent·A·House 979-8430 3 Br + Oen, crpt/drris. dsh11·hr, lrt>shly pa l n I P rl II /lO\'Ply yard. $ 2-;" J · S.ffi.6002. 3 SOR.\[. 2 Ba, drps. eris. xlnt condition. sz:;o monih 96.l-3715. .a BR. 2 SA . fa mily rm CarretJ; and Drart"~· SZ65. 1* 847-9<~2 J BR CONDO, II: BA. pools., p.citu:i. ilhl ,£ilr. !rpl. nr ocean. 962-09Sfi <'11 :. pm. 2 BR • s1:,5 + 3 Br. nr ocean. s1,i;~ J\1ch/pr t~ Rent·A·House 979-8430 3 BR .. crpr~. 1v;uer paid. 230i Florida. S120. mo. 962·9~mi. Irvine 3 BR . 2 Ba .. ra m. rm. S1~ 3 BR .. 2 baths ......... ~~JI. 3 BR .. 2 ba .. atrium ... s.:J.i THE BLUFFS 2 Bdrm l..· den tol\1\hnuv Dbl 1:~rat:'" 1\'.~a r poot & 1-h0pp1n.;:. $36' mon th. {.rst /t~ · ' -~ J~turr ~~y "" 2414 \'1$Ta r1rl Oro :0.-l'u."J>'1rt Bf'•ch 6.J.1-1111 A'\'YT!'.\TE 8A\'f'R0:'\"T-RE~'\iAL ,VII EdC:f'l\'111PI', co r n pr lnrY>n;i.ri'."l ,\ BR 2 h.\lhs. g;ira.c:,. r r11. hP11ch A1 ail ,ful~ l,1 ~Ir Rt1h!n5Qn 11\\'IS REALT Y &12-~roo RAr \'1('11·. I~ ~Br 2 R:t ' hv nu. 1•Jfrplc PLCS ~Pr. Sturl1(1.k11ch"ll t,. t>;i, h'tl rooJ S.li:.1 6·1?-il20J. fi.1~-1 1~! \\'ATERfRO'.\T \\/rlock-;n F.1aJto r ti;:innrl C!lmpl,.!1'11 n1orlern1z,.d 2 Br , :t B;:i ... ' srory. Larg,. l1ving.f1u111ly r onm . F 1rPp l t1 ('!', l11nij ~.-ar,.rl. p11·rr1 .' lrrl floodl 1gl11~. 11•t1 lf'r S· 1••11rr 11-t ~p~,1;i.ll. Yr!y 11 S.l"l 1n•~ c 11 11 A '.\I or r \! MESA V ILLAG E APTS. 3 BEDROOM-$150 2 childr en welcome, no pets Forced Air Heatine. • \\1ater Pa id • larpe1s - Drapes • Buil t-i n Sto"e · Carpet · Stall Shn\\'· er· Launclry Roont ·Fenced \'ard. 1046 El Camino O r. :A Costa Mesa HIDDEN VILLAGE APTS. Home-Like Living F em iliei Welcome! 2 BEDROOM-2 BATH F romS1S9 546·733 1 Carpets · Draoes • .. \1r Cnnf!Jtinttt'rl • f.prJns· ed patios. HPatt'd Pool -f orced .\1r llc-:it · Carport & St nra~e. 2500 South Salta, Santa Ana 546.1525 {enter 2 hlk ~ \\' nf fir 1 ~tn\. off \\':ir:1 rr nn Linda \\"ay. $0Hlh 1n \\'. Cenlr~it) VILLA MARSEILLES SPACIOUS 1 & 2 BEDROOM APT. Furnished & Unfurnished Adult Living Di ;h\Vil~h •r rl'!Jnr 1·nnrd i11:i tc<I :Jrinljanr"' Plush ~hag crtrpct -1n1rrorcd '''JrdrnhC" d ri(1r~­ ind1rect lighting in kitrhrn · hr ('akfa~I h.ir • htl,l\C rrivate fenrP.d patio • p\u~h Jand~l",111· in2 • hr1rk B3r·be·Que~ · large hr:it('d pnnt s ,~· l~nai. 3101 So. Bri!.tol St., Sant.11 Ana 537-8200 COLDWELL. BANKER & CO. -----MANAGING AGENT H AP.BO!~ \' 1f'1\' h.,n1,. -2 Br· l!!!!!ll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!i!i!l!!i~~":!!iii!!ii•••I!!!!!!!~~ I df'n-2 ha·h~i; r1rr.·1h1nz A t Furn. 360 1 Apts. Furn. 360 s~oo. !nrludf'~ rnn1 dut>~ & 1 __ P_'-·-------- garrlrnrr f>.14-49"!!1. Costa Mesa Huntington Beach FOR VaM-, ~r11pnrt •I BR .. 1------.-.--c--c::--I;;·;;·;;·;;;··;;·;;·;;·--;;,;·;;;;;;;;-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 211 n:i .. nr ~.-1.,...,111 &· ~h"r;: $30 WEEK & UP A\'atl. J utl» J~1. S.'~,'i Eves. e r;:tud1ri f.· 1 Br ilj"llS 21..1 7'.1~•11:'; e i\'"ll'ln1 SFi & I.iii LaQUINTA HE R MOSA I' '62-4471 ( ::::J S46°llOJ rm. hai; \ge. stone frpl c.; ---------- nire pa110 areas: good neigh· ++ O'.'li 1 ~ ACRE + * 2 BR .. 2 bath units. 2 yrs. old. Fully cary. & draped. Coverf'li parkin g. ALA Rental• • 645.3900 Sl3Q.l I Br. 11.:tlk hrh. $22().2 Br . sn::::ls. cpl,;. Utl pt!. R1nt-A-Hous1 979-8430 Houses Unfurn. 305 General "f'Ju ~ 1Jrllil, VIE\\' HOUSE KJ:\'t';!> RO e T\' ~· ~T;i1rl SP1,·1rP A1·ail SummPr rPnral Ava;1J J unf' e Rf'"l'l!i'll1nn Rm -Pl'IOI ls! 6-12...f;~S9. • Ch1lrtrf'n &· Pet f>l'l'llOOJI S1,1111~h (',.,.,,1,~ .. L.,t.11,.. 1-11 1ni:: k Sf''" 1nq• .,pl ~. Trr r,1rrrl fl'll'•l. ~unkPll ~.1' BBO t:nhl'llf'\';i hlr l,11·1ni:: - Only 4 Bedrm. $28,500 horhoorl, clo!ie to schools. 4 BR, nev.·er, ocPan vie\\'. A k 14, 9'-" pool, amenilJP~. S64,750. s 1ng ·" ""'· Best Loca1ion ---'l~eultor • AU \\"Jf'1r <"rl'd1t ('arrl~ Z37fi N,.11.(Vlrt Blvrl.. !Wil 9755 32S Th11 Ad \\'nrlh S!l nn_3~ 1 BR . FURN. $175 · 4 bedrooms. 2 separate b111h homf' -only 2 yrs. nrW. Rei- fer than TIP\\' conrlil1nn. Shorr Jni:; to b,.arh'. Family room, 111ft> ~;ivE"r bu1lt1n kHrhf'n . "all rn 1v all earpro!ln>;, dr~pl's & "'1nd011• co1·p1·1ng~. i'\o d1111·n G.J, tern1s · 1011 • 101\' rlnwn nnn. Vf'I~'. 0\1•ner 1·ery anxious! 962-$1:~65. + 499.mJO * ** 20N l ** Condo. Furn. or Unfurn. TARBELL $21,500 3 BR. 2 BA, $6.iO. 1nn1·rs ynu ln. ShOl\'S ti kf' modPl. 0 1n rm. liv rm &: m<istPr BR CQ•n pl ~nunrlroof. elrc hl11n ~ 0, f ,\ ht, rrp1,;, rlrrs. ftrepl & pauo. Good loc. I' 1llage Real Estate '62-4471 ( ::::.) 546-8103 $30,500! No Down Terms ( Spa r111us hrrlrooms. 2 &learning p11J!n1an hahts, drP;im of a k1t rhrn, dt"llL\'.f' bu1H1n apph;incei;. dish· \\asher. Elrg11_n t f!replacf', beautiful shag carpeting, trPshly patn1E"d. Decorator "''a\lrapPr arr rnts. Su re to pleasP the mn~t particular J>eop JP'. Fl2·2;,f\l, TARBELL REPOSSESSIONS For informa1 1on ::ind loca!inn of lhese FHA & \' ,\ hon1es, --BEACH-HOUSE- $29,500 Qui11nt home area: close In. Beam cei\'s., nr. to ceil. Irplr., picturP. 1\·indc11v, ref., v.·a;shf'r. 1 BR 11•/balh. MISSION REALT\' 434·0731 BEACH HOUSE- $29,500 Qu;iinl hntnt? area; close 1n. Bram rFil',;., [[') lo cPll. frplc., picture 111ndo11" ref.. "'·asher. 1 Br \\•/bath. '.\11.S.SIO~ RP.Al.TY 4~-0731 3 RR, ~pht-!e1·el, on dbl lnt. Full ocr;invie11" deck, frplc. ,& large ln$cpd fncd bckyrd. S.12.000. !liO R~ia St . , Laguna Bch 4'J-l-84611 BY Owner: Vit>w home. 4 Br., 3 Ba. Lo1rcr r..tystic Hill . $6:'\,500. Call 673-52fll. Lido Isle * BAYFRONT * Bi>autifully decorated. im· mae. Pier & slip. 4 BR, 5 ba. tam. rm. $197,500 LIDO REAL TY INC. 3377 Via Lirlo, N.B, 673-7300 NEAT_-~~ and clean 3 BR. 2 ba. & lam· tly room home. Large strada patio. $51 ,000 howm;ib lawsoD jr:. "col.COA 3.tl6 Via Lido 675-4562 contar! _ Mesa Verde KASABIAN FOR "''' by o•·oer. c.~I. 2 Real Estate 847-9604 Srory 4 hedrm. fam rm. lormal din rm, lrg h;ick 25 Vacant Homes y11rd, covd patio. xlnt cone!. 3 & 4 BPrlroom~ 1n grinrl a.rPa, 543.500. OPE/\' HOUSE Sat some 11·11h pools. FHA & GI & Sun. 2n2 Albatross Dr. financing. S4l'l0 tn SJOO !o!al Ph. 540-3558. Principals on- do111n and rrnt 'fil e1cro1v ,,.,;l>_·--~~~~--- closes. Newport B11ch Roberts & Co. 962-5511 NPT. Isl. • \\'atertrnt duplex. DUPLEX T•k• :io· !>Oat. Ow on One yr old. 1 bedrm, shag 11 /fine. Ph. Ann Coats. carpels. draprs. VAIFHA 642-8989. Corbin-:i..-tartin 1ern1s. Only $31,000. Call Realtors. 960::-4441. HARBOR \fJE\V HOZ..1ES CREST REALTY 4 Be .. FR. DR. Palermo oo VACA~T bea('h cottag e. knntty pine kitchen. UM'd brick ltrl'placl!, hAth & 11Anl· ty. Custom ~huna-s & ('!lbinPt s. Arr1~1 -01\1ner sa~·~. "&>II la~1 YI I can travel." Bkr. 961-.5511. cornf'r. Lush extras. Cht-nf'r. 6.t4~24'J. C0'.\1E Stl! me 1n THE BLUFFS. 441 Vista Roma. 2-~ pm. BmkPr, 644-6340. HOUSE Hunting! Wa tch the ~ OPEN HOUSE rolumo. j 2 housE"s on I lot. On ocean bluff. OcP.an v1e11'. \\'alk dO\\'n !o bl!il Ch. S46,7j(). Thomsen Really 492·95j() •• •••••••n ta., DIC. 2 4-Plexe,r;, good cond. & LANDLORDS! loc;ition. io~Q Ori11·n. \~~a::~l~~~~naind~~:~~; ~ j t.:n1ts ll!l li.:e. lot, nr. I Laguna • & Dana Point. Mobfle Homes Jillil hospiiaJ .'!: shoppingi Our Ren till Service ls FP.EE ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~;;iiii;llO Hou.~f'!' on a lo!, exchang~ lo You! up or SPIJ. F'ORTll\', !lPal!or &12-;-,oo'J NU-VIEW RENTALS Mobile Hom11 673-4030 or 494·3248 For S.ra 125 A'ITR.4.CTIVE Trt-p!ex \\'. V NO CLEAN 3 BR ------,,.----·! &ide Costa l\!Psa . Id~al for ACANT A 1 - -Vacation or Ptrmanent 011·ner occup1P?', Prine. On-Mmi> 11·ifh fl'nrt>d yarrl. lOxJO 2 Br. Family Park, nr. ly. f)ii'Tier. :>l'J-181)1;. fireplarP, hu1Jt1n,!:, n P a r Sou•h Cr:ia ~r P l:il:i S230 per Dana Point Marina, beach. ~E\V DLX Dana Point A .. mo. At:rn1. .llli-1111. · -11·n1 ng, pore ... s1oragr, duplex $·19.9.'"iO. 339712 S1h·er cle;in. S.3200 . .t93-ti937 Lantern. \\lebh. Bkr. 642-4905 SliPET-!. Sharp 4 Brlrm · a;IJ "SINCE 19.t6" Ist \\'eatrrn Bank Blrlg. t:nivers11y T';irk. l!!l.'tlll' Deys 552-7000' "'l'liglils 3 BR. 2 baths .. $3151335 .14.i 3 BR. 2 ba!h,; .......... $.125 3 BR. 2 ba. fam. r111 ... S.165 (ired hill REALTY L:niv. Park Center, Irvine Call Anytimr, 833·0i!20 * $25 PER WEEK * Newport Beach --'--------·[& '-'ri -POrll & n1;i1d ~Prv - 3 SH , 2 B~ . ha.r. l'\'frything kitchrn\ .:tl'ail ;ihl,, S31lfl. l\~r!.,/rP!., nk i\·TOTEL TAHITI Rent-A-Hous4t 979-8430 ICornrr J!arlYlr \'wlnna) ToWrlhOUs-e-Furn. 330 WEEKLY-MONTHLY Executive Suites Costa Mesa 2080 Newport Blvd. NE\\' Tn11·nhn11~P .J unf' [;., Si>p1 1.1 2 Bil Cpl~ .. dr~ CL TV Strrrn 'i1lfl mo. Uhl Co5ta Mesa 642-2611 STUDIOS & 1 BR'S inc. Poot. 97~liJ2. e FREE L1nrn~ =r~o-w-n~h-o-u~,-e-u~n~f~u-r-n-. -3~3~5 • FREE' U111Lr1rs 14 hlks S. of San 0 1f'o:;n fnl".' rin Bf'11 rh. 1 fi)k \\' nn llol1 to 16211 P;:irk .. 1rlr l.rinr l (i l l • S!i :-..111 $11i Sl~i Rit rh,.ln1· >.-l BR. lrplr'~. r n1·, & tl r ol .: r ~ (li1•1'1Pd h1lh >': ]n!., 1•! rll'l~,.I~ Rr~ 11:,!1, J.o"lo •! .': !Y'lfll tnhl1·~. 111111 h 1lh~. ;:.:rr fnr ynur_.,,•11' li'Vll Kr~ty,n !."'. ~ 1 hlk \\' nl Brach, l hlk ~ nf S!11lr1·1. Rl!-i'li.I'~ ------ Laguna Beilch h!nn k11r·h., quirt rul-rlP·~ac. '61 Argus clE"IU.'<I! mobile 4 Plex near DCC. $60()/mo. s270, Heritao:e P.eal!ors . TURTLE Rock-4 & 3 ba, ----------• Full [{11,.hrn Laguna H ills • llcai .. rt Pool • Le1indry Fac\11tif'! B.\C'H ,.,, r r" ,.,.~, H1v BRAND NE\V 3 Ddrm .. 2 ba .. • TV & mairl urv avail Cl'l\rir ·rv. 11111 r•I ~1::."">-~1fJ. homt. lO'x5.i'. Goo! N.B. income. Low do11·n. $53 ,500. Jark, :lW-lt51. blrns, lam, din rm , location. Across ,!:l~et from 54fHl;J!ll. sv.·1m/tennis. 5460. &n-2i67 encl patto. cpr~. d111s. pool. • Phnn .. SPr••I,.,. UP lPl \\'K 4~-2:,11~. Adult area nt>:11r Leisure beach. $4000. Call J ohn ----.-------1 SJ90 l\1nnrh. 2 Bedroom. 642-2912 aft. 5. or 11"knrls. Industrial Property 168 l'\ev.'ly decorated imide and Laguna Beach our. l'o Fee. 842-6691 or ---------- \V 0' I ri. I 22' m 0 ' UJeBliBJIU zo ,_N_•w_po_,_t _e._._ch ___ [ 714(833-141 1 or 24x4j Cusrom built, 2 Br & JNDUSTRIAL & l,;e hl'1ng rm, dining at'f'il , CO;\l~!ERCIAL SLOGS, 11~ ha. 2 tool !'ihe"l'ls, AU Sizes for Sale or Lease. landscaped, adult park . INVESTMENT DIVISION 968-6732. 546·1600 BAY & OCEAN VTE\V 2 STORY :-.rosrLEH0'.\1E LIDO PARK. 54-0-3672 Lots for S1l1 170 Real E101tl!. [jj R-3 Jot, ~.l ren1 11 ! area. Generll 15'-"-"-' 'liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii0:.~~:1 E/s1dP. C~t $13.500. lB2 I Cecil Pl.. C.:'-1. 54&-6983. Acreage for sale 150 Mountain, Desert, FALLBROOK 15 acres in _R_e_s_o_r_t _____ 1_74 a,·ocados, oran,R:es & limes. BEACH Cottage. milP '.\lain house, 4,000 sq ft. 5 br, '.\'l'lrth of Del ~Jar. 2 4 ba. Guesr house, lge pool. bedroom, 1 b.ci1h. Fi>w yards Prict, $1:)().000. If you ha1·e to tx>st J1anrly })ea('h. By profits 1n quaJ1ty srnrk!' ri11·n,.r. P.arE" f1nrl, S27.000. hsted on !\.Y. or American \\'rin '! la;~:: \\'r11r Class1'1erl Exchange. seller may ac-,\ri :'\"o 3'5-1. ":i D;i ily PJ!or. cept ~tl}('ks as t r ad e . P.O. Box 1.;GO. C~l. olhel'\l·ise 2;17'-rln , SPJlcr 2 l.nt 1 d rf s24,soo \\'Ill carry l~t T.O. Call s. sec u e ii·eekdai·s ool.'·· 64:'.>-2820 l\foonr.1dge c~bin $1:'!.7:-il ~='='=="'~~--·[Lakeside cabin $35.000 BAKERSFIELD 9.18 acre~. Call 866·4641 or 1\'l'Jte; shopping center site. corner Spencer Reill Estate, P. O. Z..ling & Stine. Pr 1 c e Bo\'. 2828. Big Bear Lake, SG::i5.000. Ttrms. 25'1l dn. C;illf. Sf'l!er will carry l5t T.D. on,1--.,-T-IR_E_M_E_"-,T--"-.---h 1 t -,.. C 11 RL , .~ can1n ne11r a ance a i ': a Lake Orovtl!e. 3A. 'Mi th \\'eekdayA only, 64;r2820 SI' 500 Bo 166 stream "· . x Commercial Oroville Property IS8R _::e.:•"r "E'-s-ta_t_e ___ _ CdM Highway Exchange 182 Frontage Tredo or S1ll;4 Bdrm. One of a kind \'acant lot \\'Ith 2 Ba home In N. E. all kinds ol poss1b11L11e~. Orange for about same Also sel'erAI 1mpro\·prf pro-in beach area. P rinci· per11es for s11lP from $64 ,CXXl pals only. 633-3272, up. Call 675-i225. Real Estate Wanted 184 96>-5566. 2 BR W / FRPLC Stove, relrig., crpts, drps. Costa Mesa garage, large private fenced e Hard to BPal~ 2 Br, !encl palio. Near bea('h & cto11:nto"'n. $22'1. yrd. cn"l gar. kirli; olc s1::n. NU.VIEW RENTALS ALA Rentals e 64S-3900 673-40.30 or 494_3248 e Spacious 2 Br, 2 Ba, crpt, drps, kids/ pe!s ok. S!45. ALA Rent•ls • 645-3900 PAINT & SAVE$$ lt's a mtss! Oll'ner 11·111 make alJ01vanrt for cleaning & paint J(lh. t BR 11• ~tovP. & refrig. S85. ALA Rentals • 645-3900 • Believe~ 1 Br, ~tv refri_g. sml pPI . all utl inc 5911. 2 BR. qit/drps, frplc .. garage. 11·alk to beach. Rent·A·House 979-8430 J'.\l'.\IAC . 1 BR. pa tio, near l>f'ach. fo11·n. $185 + l"itaturf' adult, no pets. 434-1661. Laguna Niguel BEAUTIFUL view home. T~ts. garde!"I. lanrisc<1Pf'rl, p;i tio, O\'e'rlooks golf course. 213/633-.iS•\8. l ~~rkhni Oupl1x11 Unfurn. 350 2 BR 2BR c __ ._r_o_n_•_d_•_l _M_•_r ____ rPvl. pal 11'1~. lu~h Jorr<.l SP!· BRAND NEW-Av11il. In ling, c;irpnrt~. gas rrJ . June. Huge dlx 011•nFT 's 114 E. 20th SL, C.~I. ri.1;:i.nt.'l7 unit. 3 BR, 3 BA. f irtph1ce. El Puerto Mesa new adult ap1~ furn. SHl5. furn. S215. unfurn. $190. blt-tns. lMO sq ff. + 3 • dP.ck& 11•/view ol biiy, 1 BR'i-$130 UP oceiln, & h!!ls. \\'alk to heh Furnit hed Apts & shopping. 1 yr I~. $425. All Utilities Paid Rtls. required. 673-0960. PCYll & R<>rr,.a11nn Newport Beach 1959 i\'Iaplt Ave .. C ~·1. Al~ g11r11re ~ for rpnt 3 BR.. 2 BA. Frplc.. top e TOPICAL POOL sh11pe'. 2 b!ks ocean. Yrly. 2 BR !'iturlio, J i~ BA . frrtr, $300. Adlts no pet1. 673-8088. ~p lrAl .stah"l'o'll V. sno. 14.'; E . !~th Sr. Apt 12 ).!:;...JI'~ ALA Rentels • 645-3900 hill~. 4 br·2 b;i, lrplc-shag ~ APT. ~rr.n. 't•n. rl111 1 .. ~ crpls, blrins. S.'!00 mo, By Ap1rtment1 rorRent LIV'"·ln. S.l.i riff rPnt 12 furn e Qu11>1 Rpfr,.111'. I Br. fn cd ~·~p~po~l~n~•m~'~°'~·~S:l<>-~'".::'·~"~'~· __ j'-------...J 2 Br un its .. \\;ilurf' 11.·oman yrd. "1'' rf'lril.!, SlOO M1aa def Mar •""•••••••• prpf'rf . 6~2-9520 R/1 5. ALA Rtnlals • 645-3900 3 BEOROOi\1, family room. Apts. Furn. 360 ATTRAC. comp!. furn. 2 Br, LARGE 2 BR bouse Garag•. ----------·I I" b "•d -1 ......... ,. dining room, corner lot, S~5 General i 11' " • """' '" "'"' ~ fenced yard. Consider l .. _ •-trwy _ ~t• "r month, Je:::ise, including Snup. ...: 5, •r' r-· chilrl & pet. Sl6() mo. '' iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil 0 '5-42~ 67:>-3;J.S9. g11rdrn1"'r. Agent. 675.-4930. "" ui. A * • $7.l A LLO\VANCE -+ • '.\tESA Verde -Jge. 3 Br .. 1~ Mesa Verde B Id N C Lre 1 BR. ga.riirn ;ipt Sli~ ba .. fam nn,, lrplc., patio, lmm11culate 3 BR-2 Ba. 0 IW OftCtpt 2 SR. S1~5. POOL. nn \\', 11va;1J 11hle 6/1. S 2 6 5 . ''" S CM ""5" Garriener incl. Avail. tu t. .. ,,.,r.1 . ....,. 54;.3:;.io s14. 546·8218 ai• 4 FURNITURE RENTAL 2 BDR..\1 .. cpts., drps .. M' . v· . g11ra;2e . J<:o pets. 2 !m11Jl 1ss1on 1e10 chdrlren Sl~5. 2077 \\'allacP, E'n;:ellrnt 3 bedroom home; 64&-..i92R. for !Pase. Grt>at vie11.·? $330. SINGLES or !11om1l1e5 Slli !!JIJ.7587. Vac:inT 2 Br. hm. Kirl~. 3 BR & Den, 2 Ba. $250. R1nt-A·Hous1 979-8430 CID. frplc, hltns. gas BBQ. * 2 BR. l Ba To11·nbou!f', 49;)..:i5.18 or 831~7~. Pauo /gar. Poot , $~.i. Newport Beach Cb1Jd/OK, no pets. 5.:i7-840t'l. .. f\.1on th to Month * 100% Purchase Option * \Vlde Sell!ction. Style-Color. * U Hour Delivery • $115 • ~r1id 1l'I Apt~ . l Br Sl2i. Oldtr adults !'lo pets 21.15 Eld"!n, '.'.rgr. Apr 6 DLX 2 Br h1rn apt, pool. closl! l'J shops. Adult1'. nri pets. fMm Sl50. 1 9 4 1 • Pomon;i. C:\I PJR; ~ $95 & UP -Nice l BR. 1£.l; ; tr11 1lers Adults only, m pe!1. 132 \\'. \VliMln, C ~1 CLEAi' 2 BR-!r& fen ced yrct. * HARBOR VIEW HOME * Sil W. 19th, CM 548·3'81 645-47>.10. COLWELL Sll:I. Big P 0 r c h -PI! ts Branri nl!w 4 BR 311 BA, ii·,,;,.;!i!!'!i'i!. !!'~''!i'"!i'!!!!SA!i!!!!!i54~;~-0i!3!it4!I Furn. Bachelor & 1 Br 's 11·el come: &46-105.). • II · 2110 lirepl. Pnrtofino model. $500/ 1spec1a y nice. CASH $ CASH $ D•n• Point '"· "'"" 644·7270. Balboa Ponlnsuta Newport Blvd., CM. PROPERTIES. INC. REALTORS F or your homf'. Have buyf"r5 4 BR., 2 BA ., .. Jee. gu .. f11sp \'acancif's cost r-".ln~y~ Rent e S25 \VK &-UP·On OceM e f t:R:-1 2 BR, S 1 5 .\I rn o \\'ailing or 1ve'l! huy il Up to cpts .. drps. S325 1st &-las1 :-rour house. apt., 1tore Lovely Bach · 1 Br .• Rooms Arlultl'o. no pet~. 8:JI CentPr $45.000! CalJ \VALKER & Sl YI. clean11p. Reis. bldg .. etc. thtu a Daily Ptlot Maid servlct -POOl·Litil Pd. Sr .. 0 -1 &-12-58.a3. 2 BR urprr-2 MUM'S lo ' i, .. arh. Drrt/)e!, ~hilg crpts. $2:",() yrly IP:!l'" f.4 2-3<143. e \rINTER RENTALS' ·• \~·f'~I Nt>1vror1 Rf'50n'r mw! ARR EY RF.:AL TY 642-l'lj(l Santa Ana DE ANZA PLAZA 1 & 2 BK -Furn & 11nfum Pmls. r;,rpnrl,; & nthrr rx· tr;i~. r-.'r S A. ~ Npt Fr.vyJ1, FMm Sll5 up. A<l•ill~ only. no j'lf't,; l~OZ fru1l SI .. S.A. ,54l M2fl. Apt. Unfurn. 365 B11lboa Island NE\\' !.t tvoa11t 1l11l 4 BR .. 2 halh!. S•rr~ !n Stlu!h hay. s:i;o mfl. YParJy. LAP.CF. !,. lux•inriu!'. 2 AR. 2' b11. SJ7'i mn yr11 r ly. \\'J~TO:-; !{EAL F:STATf. m '.\l.'.!rino A1•('. B::ilhrl;i Island 6i':l-33.'l Corona del Mer -(S~;~.~ ON TEN ACRES 1 k 2 BP .. Furn. &. Unturn. Firepliices / pr1v. p1:1tlo1. Pools Tennis O>n!nt'I Bk!.!lt . 900 Sea Lal\!!, ~d'.\1 f.tol-~11 1rila;r Arthnr nr Coils! H'M'Yl 2 BOR..\I~ .. 3 htilhl: lrp~e. F::1n1a,,flr· .,,. .. An \I""' S~2.) ;\lnn!h. :-.o JY"• \\'Ll1J::1111 \\ !n1"n H"1ltnr S©~~1A-LG£trS" LEF: R,.altors At 968-33n or Fra nk. 4~~j )2 art 6. Cl;u1!rf!er.l Arf . • Call 6i'5·8i40 • VERY nrce 1 Br. dplx. QuiPt, :N6-1J57. ~;;;:"";::;;;;~;::===;,:=============::::=== Adi m :-.t.:irine ,\1·r , &lint! 1 ~J·u~11 .;r-....1:111 SHARP ~· rl1 ~"1rr~1m. 2i.2 harh 1•·1lk rn h"11rh. family rrrf,.rrrrl ''"n~h ,,, month '-1'1<1 pr mrinth Ca ll ;I.Ir Ba!ll"\, ~1.~-i1\'i0. s .. p. hy i:;~rage~. I t over 2 BR TO\l'Mhl'l•i~r. nrw <"l"f'll!t , ~ 30. no pP:ts. 548-1021. 1 r lk ' "" h ff.':rlr IT\ s TAR GA'ZEEj(~ t ,,.::k::.;2 ~B~R"•",,,=.,,,'-,,'-',:: .. :,.,,-u-M"ry-, r~~.t, ~1'ts~01 no 0 pe ~('I : 1.___"0_'"_"'_1 _J I• I •• I I I r I The Puzrle wifh lhe Bui/f./n Chuckle I ... -, w_,_, N_,_·N_K_, _., I Teenager'• comment: "Thero -· · · · • Ts a g irl who d resses cool and ~~,:::H::a:r::R::E::r:::1~-~p!ete 11ie cnvckle s~~ot.d j • I ' I J I V by f!llln; In th11 mining wor4- . . . . . you dtytlo~ from sttp No. 3 b1low. fJ r:~~l~~Y~·BsE~~tfS 11 12 ,, I' 11 I' I' ,. I ~ t> ~~l~'.':'8'' '0 '1 I I. I I • I I I • SCl:·<M·LET5 ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 800 Business Wanted 210 I'.\' SU RA;o.;C E agency, casualty, 11.·anted. \\.ill pay top S for Orange c.,unty Aa-ency. Call 7141833-06'.rl Money to Loan 2t0 1st TD Loans S'A % INTEREST 2nd TD Loans l,.o\\·e~t ralf's Orange Co. "WE BUY TD'S" S1ttlor Mtg. Co. 642·2171 546-0611 Servin~ Harbor are.a 21 yrs. \\'e Buy N ' Trutl Deed!. The Jru.1n Co R.tal">B 64 ~lll 61() ~1111.'JlOrl Cen•e.r Or 9.lll'" '4,\ Newport Betch. 1.rh:Jte ElPpl\ant 0tme-A0 Llne . II; CUY IL POI.LAi."'\:---~----l adul!s. no pets. 687 Victon.a 6iJ.441i' AklfS Ji.. y D ., ' . . G • • Ji.. L1tkA c ;\f. 54.8-61.3~. ~ ..... /l!<<N r·· 2 RR vi•w ~Al, 21 our 01; ,.ct1v1/y UICt Sfn 21 :.n ,.,., I " • • Af'-'' AccorJi11g lo 11.t 5/on, ,' i i 1 BR Ira:: SlV..11-l"i f\1•1n t'iioti~ frpl.. h'",1m !""11. httn..• ~. s..37-38.10 Todevelopmeuoge forWiednesdC'{, ~cr.21.• '$' Jr1 .. al lrir bachtlors. SIPIYJ! S2.'ti/m" lii"'>-101:.. lli1--.l2"ill .e.. S.7 nodwordscorrespond1n;;tonumbets ~~:!""' Arf lt,;. 1m Church. 54~1 2 BP. hi•,,, nnnJ \\"tlk to of ycor Zodioc birth sign. .-- OELllXE l r,r 2 Br, nr sh<lps. h,.arh S2"fl \l., f1ra11;;:" 1 Put 31 /).cldr.i 61 l"r 2:Dthft1: 32!1 62Tr.nli ?tvil Arlhs. m pets U1U pd Co;i~• R'"1J f..~t"tr f;.t~I~ J '!o'rf 33 c.,.;i 6J K~:;i 1~54 ~tonrovi.11 548-113.?J;. Costa M••• 4 !t ::l' ln•~ u cr,f M P'7•,r 5 Nt• 3SD•r'~I 65Yo,.i"11 (Y)'.\tPLEiEI.Y turn 1 Sr ------,----, ~rr.:·re ~j?';:,.,,. r,~ <!lfll :itl'lUJI~ only,,., P'"~S 111 • I.RCi f>'l11\" -AR , 2 RA e1~,.. .:>a:Cr.e-'""' t.•v~~ f l')'l•r s1 Sll5. ~iM3 I aJtr ..... ~I ('l"t ol.. !-.r. So~ .t!.11.,.... J?W~•}f'G 61 0'-"" Ciu~t Pl11z11 ~· ... nzl 10kt• .. ~ei...i 1 n1-">d --- , lr1-~~·• "'""'J 7·,~~.r Huritington &each 2 61t 11r-•.11\.r~ 1f'lr1 .. ,.k 12Yc<1 •2 Y~'Yt 72 ";"., __ ....;:_ ______ , Slli 1111"\. Call :tf"'T .l pm., JJCif 4~&.t ;'J,o.;. " BR f I ' -11 /)~1 1 '"~'" 74CJ!lf':r,i "' • rpr · (rp S r-rt1< 5~391 1 ~c;..... ":s°"'" 1:sr>.,:1 hl'ns. 11, blks orP11n. \'•lr-1 _::.:c:,..;:c:..: __ ~-----·I ,1 6~ "~-"~x ·tl 7~11:-:< I\ 22'2 3M $i. J{B LR(; 3 Br, 2 Ell, rn prt.11 . t71i\olt •7!"''" 11>~,J ~, .... ~ .• 21 , b ...... "lam. 0,. a!' Chtlrl,r~n .";.; \r '~ltl~ l • 1s0on1t ·~r • .,t ~ 1aw.1r ~ '"" ~ • 1 l '-1 !O'nt 190...r..at .. 0~:11 79w..,..,i"l 6 pm !Mp;;. !+• f~, '-' ___:_ ~oc~ ... ~,, 50tt lO~, 1-B·R-I II ' ri I LIO 21R.ed~~,. Slin1 11p,,1-,,. UPPER fM 2 B l "l•ltn "1 " rm @ JUlYl1 1 '211" 5lY~t i 2B>:·1u.,, ni r Lnlf""• ..... m ;h•t"!rP11n~ Sn OWrbvik,n; l~k.. park A· •' -~ .... • >l 1. ll v-"Uril'O\'t'.ed 13 l>1·•-l1r1 , I o \!""'" \' ,, , C \I 2_;j9:CS ~•U•u·tnobl1 !.'~ l~Ott°"'• bf'aur. p nrlo~f'tt pat)l'I & ?""'ll ~~ _., •_;,;:/ 1 • • ~119.77.79 1~~;~ j:1~_..,.,•, :!~ A'1•1lt,, I'll"\ p#'!S, Sl~, l~:ti 1 sr f.•fln•; .... ,r• Slr\ VllGO 11Qcp:nlotlll'J !7}1"'·'~ i 1t1 ,1~11 ll'th St,.-3.Y,...~'l'l I ~·,.. T''"'' • '.'ntf\ St 73. "G JJ 210r !f (1;H ltl~t.,.nt : "80"'.t. ls ... ''"-, •. , _..i:...,.'· (3./Au1. f2'1H~ 5'l.IM e~D:.··1 lt•.1'):!1t • .,,. ,.1r, "" _ ""'~st,r.11 .JOM(Utf1 000... fOtt:.57.0 14At>a~~ r.rpt_!o (. drp1, hltnJ $1T\ J..J.:'" l•1 IT4•~ Ota h~ifer's '!!'!!~..&I ~'••'°'Go<>! @A3Y'C:ne 6'.Xcii~d 1·•1·•9'6Y'.,-! Jr.fl ~·., ch1ldr•rt. i'~l Ell.I r,rvi.o,. r n IJ. fnr )'OU1 ----~==~=-==·=\5:i========'U====::!!="="="='='=_,.,;:!_ ____ l -'\1' Apt A. 8.t7-n.li .\1 ,,,, rl•\ !or \h11rk1 • • I OAIL V PILOT Apt. Unlurn. 36S Cotti Mesa HARBOR GREENS Furni1hed & Unfurnished From $120 to $215 mo 8echelor1 e 1 Bdrm1 2 Bdr m1 e 3 Bdrms Tut 1d1y, May •. 1972 Schools , and 1 V2 or 2 Full Baths I e high beom ""'"•' ''"' nstruct1ons ?-last.er 11ze ~drooms w • living room \\. gas or · wood l;lurnin; fir,..pl acP. ConvtniPnt laundry arPa o ff kitchen. Enclr1i.ed pa- tios. 2 s\\.imminJ;; pools. sauna. r"cr ... ation fac1lt- ties. Security guard. Modol1 Open 'til 9 pm. 2700 Peterson Way, CM nr Harbor Blvd & Adams 546-5025 This va1·iety of fine schools could introduce For you to a new to111orrow. further inform•tion r119ardin9 the Da ily Sc;hool1 a nd lnstruc;tion Oirec;tory CALL 642-5678, EXT. 325 Pilot l 9 1 .. ere worth tre inin9 for • TRAVEL • ADVANCEMENT • SECURITY AIRLINE SCHOOLS PACIFIC Learn How You Can Qualify Call 543°6655 610 .E. 17th St., Sant.a An1 Computer Reser vations Training For Quali· fied Graduates At Los Angeles Internati onal Airport. By CONTINENT AL AIRLINES A WINNING COMBINATION Your apart1nf'nt 1n a FrPnch Country garden -yet near , shopping and act1vi11es. 1500 sq. ft. Df li ving -yet easy to maintain. Impeccably managed -yPt. pt!rsonal and privare. Jnsldl!: 2-3 hed- rooms, 2 bath!!. Ou tside: pool. pulling, nature. From $195. ACTIVITY KNOWLEDGE NEWPORT OCEANOGRAPHIC INSTITUTE Childr·en discover great things at our school. Themselves. ST. ANDREW'S • KINDERGARTEN THE VENDOME 1845 Anaheim Avenue CaU l\1rs. Phil11pl'! 642·2824 DELUXE APARTMENTS Air Cond • Frplc's . 3 Swim· ming Pool!! -Health Spa - Tennis Crts • Game & Billiard Room. 1 BEDROOl>f l'ROl\f $165 MEDITERRANEAN VILLAGE 2400 Harter Blvd., C-M. ITI4) 557-8020 RENTAL OFFICE OPEN 10 AM TO 6 PM Park-Like Surrounding QUIET -DELUXE l,2&3BRAPTS Prv. patios * Htd Pools Nr shor'g * AduHs Only Martinique Apts. 1777 Santa Ana Ave .. C.M . Summer program for students of all ages starts June 21 . Identification of tidepool plants & animals, snorkeling. sailing & simple navigation are featured . For Further Information Call : Mon. thru Fri., 9 a .m .. 5 p .m .-645-4465 Eve1 & Weekend1, Call: Dr. Dern, 644-0306 Or Mr. F. Vaiuso, 675-6748 bO I Irvine Ave. Newport Beach Our school. Ea rly Achievement Center. Unlike most pre-schools, we do more than keep little hands busy. We keep little minds busy. With science. Math. Language. Art. Social Studies. Things like that. Impressed? Don 't be. It's not wh at we teach that's so special. It's the special way we 1each. We encourage children to discuss things. Touch things. Act out things. So they wil l better know their capabilities. And themselves. (Wh ich is just about the greatest lesson 'of all.) Ok, like to discover more about us? Call or write for our free brochure. Or drop by our Sunflower school. We're open yea r 'round. So parents can come in anytime. And children can be enrolled anytime. Apartments for Rent ~ .._I _ • .,_ .. ,. __,I~ . -r. Apt 113 646-5542J•·-------· New V illa Cordova Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unfurn. 365 Rooms 400 365 Apt. Unfurn. Su~r Deluxe Adult Dana Point Newport Beach Living . 2 BR Apt s. BRAND Ne,,.,, 2 & 3 BR I PARK NEWPORT APARTMENTS Newport Beach LUXURY 2 BR-d('n 11pt. v.·/many tixtras-overlookin~ lr\·ine CDuntry club .Jt. C0'.\1PLETELY furn .. clean. ha.ch quarters. Pnv. en- tranee, hath, pal10, util., f'mn!d. 1nan sso . .'H&-~43. ~lo. to l\lo. $170 Ga~ & \Vtr· pa.id 2323 Elrlen Av~ .. C.l\l. 646-0032 Unils. Architeet designed. Near schools. Crpts, drps, bll-i ns. $200 to $275. Avail June 1. Call 646-8676. Oft the bay Pacific ocean. l-" u 1 r y Luicur/ apartment living ov-C r p t e d -d r aped -\\'er erlooking the ,vater. Enjoy bar~le!Ctr1c 2 car garage $750,000 health spa. 7 gw\m-and much more. 644-21 :l.'i. ming pools, 7 llghl.:!d ten-San Clemente * PRIV1\TE ROO'.\t FOR ELDERLY LADY. I~ THE HO\lE OF AN R 1''. 5.16--0977. $13.1/mo-1 BR . Imm a c . ---------'- Crpls. drps, bltns. Carport. Fountain Varley Laµndry. Quiet 4-pleic. \Valk ---------- to shop'g. Nr. Fl"\\')'S, No pets. Jnq: 2872 LaSalle, Apt 3 BEDR00?.1 CONDO. Xtras 2, CM 557-158-1 galore. Plush ne"' shag nls cour t.s, plus miles of bicycle trails, putting, shuf-2 BR, s1ovP, refru.~ .• oc~n flehoar<I. croquet. Junior 1·s VlP\\' nr heh., .::irhilts, 1539 from $164.50 monthly: also J Buena V 1~t;:i. 192-4:J02. CONGENIAL employed man. Nt"11r V1ctnna 6~6-t.'i!)!I Sunflower Early Achievement Center 251 5 West Sunflower Aven ue Santa Ana, California 92704 714/540-4750 • 0 lij]~RJ W@~lli~ • Individual attention • Small Class Room e Enriched Curriculum • Christian Nulure • Accredited Fall Registrations Available St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church 600 St. Andrews Rd., Newport Beach * * 646-4646 * * • Medlc.ol hlltont • Dental Aulste11r • l11kl9tle11 Ttt.r1py T.U11fc.l•11 • l1Mrt111c.y Melllc•I Tech11lc.f111 • l!ll:G Tec.ll11lc.J111 • Madie.Ill Receptionist BY A RECENT ACQUISITION OF NEWPORT BUSI- NESS SCHOOL, CALIFORNIA PROFESSIONAL COL· LEGE NOW OFFERS: • DELUXE 2 Br, priv patio. garage, bit-ins. drps, cpts. 398.C Woodland. Co r carpet S325. per month. larwin realty 968-4405 Anylime ar.d 2-bedroom plans and San Juan Capistrano 2-story to1vn ho··~s. Elec· _____ .:.,_ ___ _ CO:'ll i'"ORTAB LE room for r mployf'rl man, pri\'ale en· rrance, C.:\L 646-.1689. e Typl11t e look!te•pirit I~' Tu s r 1 n I \Voodland . $1'/J. -=--------6T;>-2150. 3 BR., 2 Ba-Pool & Rec. Room. 17709 Brilt.!lny Lane, 962-3617. New Villa Pedro 2 Br .. 2 Full Ba. Fan11lies \Velcome Shag cpt ldrps, patio, bea1n ceil, gaTa.ges. from 5185 2332 Elden Ave .. C.M. 548-8224. Huntington Beach ON BEACH! FURN. & U!\<f'URN. 2 BR. From U>5 Ii\l'i\.lAC. 2 Br. 2 Ba. clM.e Sn, ADULTS ONLY Coast Plaza . Yarn. cnls. Furniture Available drr_s . .::ill bltn~. chil.rl rrn nk. c 8 r p ets-drapes-rlishwasher Z71;-i KellPr. Tina :;..!6-06-t9; heated pool-saunas-tennis Kay .i 4 6 -Ii 3 9 9 : Oa\'e rec room-ocean views ~~8. patios-ample parking Security Guards. HUNTINGTON, PACIFIC R E D ECORATED lrg upstairs-2BR-Ne11· rltapPs & "hag c r p t~-hl t 1n~-ht1,1!P pr1/pa!io in lrf'p;hly painter! 4-p!ex. wflaurl. Slj(). 71i6 7ll OCEAN AVE .. H.B. Shalin1ar. 642-731 :'i. £TI 4) 536-1487 "Tl-lE VICTORIAN"· 2 Br Ofc open 10 arn-6 pm Dally 1r/ gar. adl1 i., cpt/drps, -\~Vl~L~L"IA~M~\\~'A'lL'lT~E~RS~~CO~. bhns, fncd ~rd 11/patm.:;; \Vtr p<1. Call bt11·n t-i SEA AIR APTS a $115 ~tai. Lrg. 2 BR. Crpts. drps, bltn!. 667 VICTOR IA "B" S15:l 1 blk N. of Adam:<1 off Beach Blvrl . 729 No. 6 Utica. SPAC. 2 & 3 Br apt. $140 ~P· 5.'h-2i96 Dr 536-7070 Pool. cpt/drp, bltns, kids I "°"""~.:.-.:.-:.,;.~-CC.,--: ok. 2 BR. apl. Crp!/drps. & 1996 ~1aple No. 1 &l2-3SIJ3 .~love, nr. beach. Nn pet~. 2206 College No. 5 &C!-7035 Avail J unt' 1sl $13 5 . 1 B ~ 2 B 5.36-9942. R wf~n-a. 1~-==~~-=--~ 2 BR . Arl ults. nb f""I S 2 BDR~f. 11'1 BA, crpts. BAY l\fEAOO\VS APTS drpl'. hlln~. c h 1 Id re n 387 \V. Bay SL. C'.\I 646-00n '''elcome. 5145. mo. 7681 2 BR d fr I .E ."·1-=lis:..;A;_":;·..cAc;p:-l .CA'-. .084_7:--7-;'>177;__. , en. p. pn pa t10. :- drps. crpl!., tedf'C Afr 5. 1 BR Condo Pool. "'Shr/dry .. 548-83rlt or coll: 213: cpt/drp. RIO, cpl. only. no tric kitchens, private patios NE\V 2 BR., 1 BA .. pool. dhl or baJconies, carpe1ing, dra-gar.. quieL Lrase. Ph: peries. Subfen-anean park· 4!»--2918 or 493-302-t ing \vith e!evalors. Opfion:tl Apts maid. service. Just north of Fu.;n, or Unfurn. 370 Fashion Island at JamOOr-1---------- ee and San Joaquin Hills Costa Mesa Road. Nf:\VPORT BF:ACH Telephone (714) &14-1900 for r ental information Summer Rentals PALM MESA APTS. ?\llNUTES TO NPT. BCH. FURN. OR UNFURN. Unbelievably large ap\s., huge p:xil, Jar::.izzi elect bit- Ins, shag crpts, drns. sauna e!c. ArluHs, no pc\!5. SrNGLES •... , From $115 1 BEDRM .•.... From S140 :l BED Ri\f. •••• From SIGO You're r ii::;ht, they're undcr- pricet:I! 1561 1.1esa Dr. 15 blks frorn Ne\\•port Blvd.) 546.9860 e SPACIOUS e Preview Showing L uxu ry apartments with oce11n J1nd hnrbor views. Smog free. 24 hour patrolled, encloaed community for gecurity. $800,000 reCrt!11tional complt"x. Singles, l, 2 and 3 bedrOJ>m luxury units up to 2,000 sq. ft. \Veil-Dr-signed Apfs. Fra111 SIK mo. la $790 mo. 1 & 2 BR. \\'/Terraces. v1 .. 1u....,.'d••.&1n~ ...... ;i. From $14-0 • $275/mo. -l9.~rodluu, ~pt, Df'·I~ Shag cpts, <!rps, l'!aunas, v' pool. jacuzzi, encl. s:ar. Q .ct Adult living r:R~:;'.i~ur;!1:~~=~1 MERRIMAC WOODS 1100 C•rn•y L•o•, ?-."••r.rt 425 ,.-rrrrimac \V11y, Ci\1 ll••<h. Collforoi• f2"0 I• 14) ~0060 1 & 2 BR F urn or Unfurn. f_l>.._,_RM __ ,.._M. ';..;;".~:;";';~':';~~I Childf"C'n's SPClion. Pool. _ $140 Up. ELM GARDENS LIVE NEAR WORK AP1'S. 177 E. 22od SL. C.ol. In Beautiful Ea!!tbluff 642-364 j, (Near Ne,,.,·port Cenler) Huntington Beach 1-Bdrin, Ap!. $1~ ...... _ .... .;.;.;..;~,;,... EaTIY bird !lpt!Cials-1 BR IW llA-CL... from Sl2j ... 2. BR rroru $1 :l.l 592-5227. pets. $160. 548-140:>. • • 17s.6oso 0 NEW SANDPIPER 2 BR. Upper, ele.c bltns. Ir v ine I --~-F urn/Unfurn, cool {'()[or ln- Tf!frig •. closed gar a g, .1-~..:.-------WESTCLIFF teriors. pool, Jacuzzi. more. Quiel. $140 to r espons1blr CAPRI 8081 Hol111.nd Ori\'e, Hun- adult .. No pets. Ref ~. PARK WEST 1700 \Ves tcliff Dr. lin,itl'on &ach. ~47-9.195. 64&-4224 APARTMENTS Adult Living-No pet.!> Newport Beach · Bdrm. From $160 •Deluxe 1 & 2 Br. Pool. SPACIOUS a.dull apl \I /lrpl 2 Bd 2 B r. • "' rm., a , ..,...rport. F urnilure avail. OAP\.WOOD GARDEN home, lrpl.. gar. hnut. F $195 ••2 62"4 l rom O't -1 Apartments lnd«Pi· . Adu ts. S l ~ j . 3883 Parkv1e11.' LAne BRAND NEWI (Resort Living for M6-4()l&. Irvine. (Just oft ADULTS ONLY -PET OK · ·Adult! Only) ** BEAUTIFUL 1 & 2 BR. San OieKO Fwr at Culver Rd ) DELUXE 2 BR $185 NE\VPORT BEACH Contemporary-Gl!.l"'den Apt!, ;----::--..,.----2 Baths, dtsh,,.,'llsher, fire-16th at Irvine Patios. trplc .. pool. Sl55-Legun• Be1d'I plac~. privat .. patio, l\vim· 64:>-0050 or 642-8170 S170. Call 546-5163. .... MJiAT I BR. near b<!ll<:h. • NEW l ·BR-blk 10 beach. Ing pool. 557·2125. VISTA DEL MESA J~ . , • ,.. t 1 . 1_ ~142 SAnlA Ana Ave. Apartment• Gsrage, paUo. $185 Month c. acu ar v1ew, ·~ up. Broker, 673-'SlO 494-3383, 4!M-2339. 3 BR.. 2 BA., CRPrS & 1 & 2 BR. Furn. Ii Unf. 2 BR .p -r. adultt only. 1150 Meta Vtrde drapes; bit-ins. Irr yard. 2 Dishwasher _ Stove&; Refrig. r~ blocks 10 beach. Club f.acil. Shag crpt'e·Lie Rec includin& utU b Tefrie. 571 DELUXE 2 k 3 Br~ 2 Ba. $260/mo. 642--0603. center. Jot.nn St., ~J).19. encl car. SW up. Rtnta.l SPACIOUS adult ptl w/frpl. RENT atarti t1S5 For tbAt. 1tent undmr Pl, otc. 3005 Mace Ave ., 2 Br. $135 or Jav.-er "'/lfgtil Irvine & M1s1 Drive ti)' Ille Peney Plnch<r _516-....:...ID=M'-. -----molnl. "48-9695. * 545-4155 * e Sllorth•11d e Le9ol Secretary preparatlo11 DAY AND EVENING CLASSES ENROLL NOW FOR SPRING SEMESTER LGE. rm .. pnv 1-TI!r & hath. Kit priv., cn1plyd only $92.50 m0. C1Js!a ~lr~a 516-728.=i. Guest Homa 415 *PRIVATE ROOM* fnr amhulatory pcr~n. Good !nod, nice cheerft1l surround- ing.~. * Call 54S-475.1 * California Professional College Summer Rentals 420 1801 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA, CALIF . 714/645·2922 BA l' "VTE\V 2 bcdroorn. !'!erps 4 completely furnish- ed. Avi:11I June to Sept. $750 pr 1nonth. Adults only agent. 675-4930. Rtnt;lls Stwdent l"•yme11t Pla11s-Groch1•t1 Ploc.e111•11I Auhl•IK• Ow11M & O,.r • ._d tly Me mber1 of the ProfH1lo11 Coll or Write for Free Catalot Rent1ls Rentals Personal• ~E".PORT 81:';\ch. 2 BR. rurn. ;int. 51;i0. \\'k . Ne1v f'Jll s. .~· pa in!. \V11lk In hf><1ch. Call <2131 596-4922 for n:'~r'r\'. Office Rental 440 Business R•ntal 445 Rentals Wanted Personals 460 BACHELOR hi:1yfront 11p1. 2 Adul!s. $200 '.\-lonth 677>-~9 Vacation Rentals 425 BILLFISH Tournament Auiz ~13. Trade Kona coa si home & car for same N£"1\'porr Sch arl'11. Adult~ only, Aui;:. 1-15. P. O. Box 10.11 Kealakekua. Hawaii 967.;(). LOOKING !or somrone to share offices. ,\1ax. SlOO. per mo. ror me. Musi be nr. Ori:1nJ.:'I' Oo. /\irpDrt. <21 31 8 lo 10 an1 449-1614, after 6 pm 44!Hi48.1 r.1r. Carlon. ARCHITECT, Engineer, etc. orc·s. 444 Old Newport Bl\'d, See lo appreciate. Eic- trr . cntr ance, $110. 548--5300 RETAIL space still avail. in bustl ing shopping cen1cr, fi00-2600 sq. Ir. 31401 Camino Capistrano, 5.1.c, 496-9615 STORE for renf & 6 off ice spaces. 105 Del Mar, San Clemcn!l', 492-1221. Industrial Rental 450 COSTA MESA OPEN. Rentals to Share 430 1440 & ~RO Sq ft. -'-:.:.:~...;;..;.::.;..;_ _ _..;~I OFFICE sp Dn Newport Bay CABINET ~1AKERS- \\'A:ITED roommR!t". male opp Linda Isle. S pea c FIBERGLASS to share 2 BR, 2 BA apt. in Bayfronl Joe. Gd Par k. Nr . N1\'Pf Frwy & S.D. Frwy Sn. Laguna. Straij(hl. App. Crpts -drps - a ir/cd, The 2931 Gra~ Ln. $90 mo. 499-4233. Islander Bldg. 341 Bayside (So. of Baker, E. of Fairvle1v GIRL 24 seeks 58.me to room Dr. 673-1620, 543-1019. I,) Mil Representative there "'/51A.rtlng in .J une. Pref. BEST location Corona del 9 am-12 noon. txh. arcR. 548.-5215. 1'1ar nr. Post oUice-Sneck f71 4l 9~-4434 Or 879-4711 \V1\i~TED 3rd girl !25--3.il lo share hoU:o;l' in H. Boch. $11)11110. 968-5797. Office Rental 440 Shop. Priv. pa r king . 576 to 9600 Sq. Ft. $85/mo. 4001 Birch, N.B. 541-5032 Rea!onomics Bkr. 675-6700. New Indus. Bldg. BAY VIEW OFFICES 1600,. It w/olo & 3 ph.,e De!UX!", air-conditiwied p1vr. 717 Ohm5 Way, C~1. DESK 5pace av&Jlable S50 Rcdccoratl'd. Lido Arca 64fi-l201. mo. Will provide furniture RealonomiC!, Bkr. 675-6700 I ~~="=-=-.,.-C"""-:':7770 at $5 mo. Answer-lat service HUNTING Brh ~1-1 14' h igh available. 17875 Beach Blvd. DESK gpe.ee a vatlable $50 block \.\'/officr ~ + 240 Huntill}?1on Beach. 642-4321 mo. Will provide furniture s.f. loft. Sl75 mo. 847~11. at $5 mo. Anlllwt!ring service f\46-2769. SPACE for lease, 1140 11q. ft., avallabte. 222 Forest Aw, furnis-hed. Newport r lnan· Laguna Be1tch. 494-9468 cinl Center. 644-1860 ~1on· ..:'.:e~Off;:;"ic"o-:::C:;o~,=,:.:.~M-.;;oc.,-0- Fri. NE\V DELUXE '.\1-1 unir1. 3 ph. flO\\'tr. 173.1 l\fonrovill. 543-3145: 836-9798 eves. 600 sq. ff. • 646-2130 EXIBA large 2 room off1ct' Rent1l1 Wanrtid in Ne\\11Qrt Bch ~hopping Bu1lne11 Rental 441 center. s:;o sq ft . $150 per ----------RELJABL.E couple, no kSds mo. 541-3323. Sl'OR.E front blda fDr lea ~. or pets. wA.nt to'le1sf! oompl Any day 1$ the BEST DAY to ~t·l tone. 207~ Placenlill. furn Bluffs Condo. June 13 run Jn &4! Don 't .;;.Col;:;:;:t>:..;;M:.;•::••::·.,:Mc:S-~7698~.=--I toOct.15.Agt.644-UlJ. delay •. call today 542-5678. For best results! 642--5671 StU the: old stu!f \VANT TO LEASE home Ne"'POrl Beach -i\·le!\a Verr!e arf"a . Ex"' cut i v e waJl1s nice 2 or 3 bedroom unlurn lshE"d homl'. ~fatut"f' courll'. \V ill care for as if it "·ere our O\\'n , Pool ok. \Vant by the J01h or Jun!", 644-lJ.13. EXEC. to lease 3-4 BR home beach cities, $?.00. range. Refereoces avall·commence J une Dr July. \V r i t e Classilied ad No. 402, Daily PiloL P .O. Box 1560, Cosla Me51'1 , Calif. 92626. 4 8€>rlroom House. fnr.1-yrar. Ref. 213 • 330-37~'6 N 0 N · sn1oking gent!emAn need11 rf";tSDn11ble priced slecpin~ room. 675-0310 or 54S-7197. Announcement• I~ Announc1ment1 SUMMER CAMP Boys A Girls 7-13. Oulstanding pro- gram-Top notch. s t a f f . Rt'1u1on11ble ratr!! -FREE Bro c hure . CAMP CA YUCOS. Cayucos, ca11r. ~1430. HAPPY BtRn-IOA Y t.JTTl.E SHERRI, FRO>! THE BIG BABY. * F1JLLY LICENSED * +, Renownl'd Hindu Spiritualist. : Spiriru.::il Rcadin,its g1\'en : daily. 10 AM-10 Pi\f. Advice : given on all ma1ters. I can ·' h<'ln you. • 312 N. El Caminn Real San Cltmente 492-9136 nr 492-9034 l DISCOVER DISCOVERY ! Find YOURSF.:LF in Someone J " Call 001v • No obligation '1 (7~ r21:11 387-3393 ', J'7'7NATTONALLY I RECOGNIZED : PROBLEl\.I Pregnancy. Con-.j ridcnt. sympathetic prega.n-' cy rousellng. Abortion 1- Adnpllon ref. APCARE. &tZ-4436. ALCOHOLICS Anonymous. Phone 542-7217 or \\Tile P. O. 'Box 1223, Co!lta Mes11 . BE relaxcd & masl!aged. The Wri1tht Place, 2192 Dupont, No. 113, Irvine. 833-2100. HEALTl-1 ll\1PROVEMENTS Guar1t11t~d. By SHAKLEE. Call 54S.-5~. ~ ' : ' ' • ~~; SJI '~ Fovnd (frH odsl , ' DOG found. 1 M!rindlptt)i, ; Q\vJie.r Toddy Sh~ts. L,~ lic1"n1e. 6i3-214'1. VtC. Mesa de.I Mar. C.l\t. to identity. 557""36TO. , ~.-.. • ' • • A NIW PU.SCHOOL TO MOTIYATI YOUR CHILD IN HIS MOST FORMATIVE YEARS! • A Total Readlnest Program e A Leamin~ Environment • Mornint Teaching Sessions SUMMER SESSION Starts June 27th Reeister Now! * Newport Air Associates Fli21rt Scllool & Ffying Club LEARN TO FLY $500. fflMKl1t Awll41•1 FAA APPROVED * Course Includes : THE-EDUCATIONAL READINESS CENTRE 35 Hours flight t ime in C essne 150'1 with 20 hours dual instruction. Club membership. 3 Month's free dues. lndividu•I instruction, tailored to YOUR ability. 20~0 M•pla Av1., Costa M11a 10 AIRCRAF! AYAILAILE AT LOWUT RATU IN ORANGE COUNTY Lurn to fly now --ind h•ve fun I * Fly Mexico & Con1da * Specl•I Rates for Commercial or Instrument Students. '46-43l4 646-3062 For Complete Oot1ll1 Coll NOW 673-0313 Interested In A REAL ESTATE CAREER? Prepare For State Exam In Four Weeks Licensing, Preparation For • Real Estate Salesmen & Brokers • Sales Success Training • Employment Placement For Graduates • Day And Evening Classes For lnformatlon·Brochure·frH Guest Lecture Orange ••• 648 No. Tustin, Suite A , •• 633°5032 Newport • • • 325 Old No. Newport Blvd. • • . 548-1192 EDMOND F. JACKSON Real Estate Education Since 1964 • ACADEMY REAL ESTATE CONTRACTING & INSURANCE SCHOOLS NOW ACCEPTING ENROLLMENTS CHILD ACHIEVEMENT CENTER 157 SO. MALENA DRIVE ORANGE 714-997-0262 9421 EDINGER WESTMINSTER 714:53 1-7470 TRAIL 11.AZfR Sum~•r Day Camp Ages 4-14 r----------, • , • VALUABLE COUPON ••• I Please SeTid i\'Ie Your Free Jllustratcd Color Brochure 1 · I , I N1m1 ...........•...•...... -. · · · .. · · · · · · I Addoss ....... , , . , .................... , .. I I C Phh01' Ind•, A. g .• · ,· .......... • • ..•..•....... , . . . . . I ............... --. ''.'. I Chick One I L ::·S::o~. ~ ~· ~·:: ·~· ~ ._, • I• NEXT TUESDAY AN AMAZING 0,,0RTUNITY ,-o~a is fun? Bharat1 Devi llcfl 1 & Katidas ha1·r taught over 570 student s \\'ho ravr about fN"linr. · betl'er, sut.'Ct'SS in lifr. personal fullilhnent &. re- laxin-::: for lhe first time· in yE"/\rs. Only al Yn,i::11 Center do you gel both RAJ1\ & llATH,\ YOGA'. Free Demonstrotlon Tuesday May 16th At B PM 'ho~ Or Com• Earty1 Yoga Center 'Plan Now To Attend. 445 E. 11th St. Cotta Men 646~211 ONE SMILE-A-WHILE DAY CAMPER · FOR HAVING TOO MUCH FUN I \Vhcre: 14582 Beach Boulevard \\lhy: S1vim School .• Sports •. Cral1$ Cookouls , . Tri11 .• Ovl'rnight s \Vho: Boys & Girls 4-14 Rr~ardlf'~.'I'. of school placemcnl \Vhen: Your Choice: By Doy, \\7cek. t.'fon lh or \Vhole Sun1ml't0 SprciaJ Education Children \Velcomf' FOR REWARD & INFORMATION 194-2313-CAL L-530-3240 Totsday, May t 1972 DAil Y PILOT JS [ ----1[5J[ s-..·-1[5J I [, .... , .•. , JIJ Gordanlnt Polnli"9 & Holp Wont.cl, M & F 710 Papt,rhan9lnt .. C 0 i\f PL ET 1:: La\\'n &. ,. * BAR..'1A1D -Nlrht 1hUI, Garrlcnin: service. lfaululJ: No Vi'1t\nnic loo<! pay tor ri&ht 1irl., & clean.up, J im, ~Hio.3. * WAllPAPiR * C'xp'd pref'd. ApplY \n LA\\'N Serviff. Exptrit:'nced \\'ben you call "Mac" penon bh\'n 2·3 pro.. Ask for .\. rtlinbll', FrN! e~1in1ates SCS..14.W '4&-111.1 1\llf.·Dan. 'I'HE GR.El:N ;;;::c,:.-;--=-;-";::'.:::;:. ::-1 LAJ\'TERi.'l, 1930 Placcnti. 003-107'2. 10'f> d11e. paPfr k hlln&1n1, Ave., CM . EXP. fl&\l.'B.iian GarJ!rncr ntobllr 111ort, vln)'I. nock. ::=,;,;;,.';::+,c;:::;-, -;,,;,::;::..,;! Con1p\e1t ~ardcn!ng .s~r\"icc ~7-.:l846 TM }{an g 1\l a n BEAUTY ato~. 'ant I" ·' · &ll--16~f 8·16-218') Unhappy ha Ir r e a• er 'ani,ull ni, ,_1 1· •· -"'/clientek>. NB. a~a. New JOllNSONR' GARDEN I~G JNT~R & Exler P111n11ng oii•net'i>, Bonu~ plans +. \'ard ~l auncn;iuet, Planling Lied S: 1n$. Refs. R<-\l:i. 6'16-l3..:;. Clt'anups 96!!-203.i ratf's. FM.'f' est Chuck, ..:::...:=-----,.---1 ~ B £A UT Y Operator-Busy CO:\I PLETE l. aw n & si· . Cp!lta :'>lci;a shop. To~ GardP.ning servitt. llau~ing PAINTING • Ho11P.st •. cl~n. SALARY + c 0 mm, & l'lean-up. J1n1 , ;,~s--O·IOJ. ~~r1u1tttd , 1~-o~k. l.1cen3Cd ~l36l. PROF'ESSJON \L & insured. 67,)--J740. _ _=::::_ ______ I 1 , BEAU1'1CIAl\S b1111y ahop, J11paricse Ga1"tlcni.t1g Serviq EXTER. Con1ple10 2 coat1, 1 ll:\Ulrantee, r o0d hrs. ?i!ale Fitt Ellt • 6-!0-0019 story S240. 2 story SJOO, !entale 833--0110 -, . Neat \\'Ork. Rov , 847-1158. or ' · 1-.xpcrt Japaneso Cnrdener · BEAtrl'Y Opr. for bu11y So. ('ompleie \·am SrrviCf' P1\l1''Tl~'G . prof. A~I 11~rk Coasr Plaza Sak>n. Phone F1·Cf' estinu~tes, 61&-71i21 guarn. Color s pc c 1• I 1 J t ~ Ei·el)n ==~--.---~ 8-12-1386. :>·17-1441. • ----·----1 Jl:\t'S Gardening, l'On1p!r1c BOYS ln11·n .~·yard Cllt't', t'l('a nups. PROfo~. paintin~. inrer/ex~t.r. \tz 10·14 to dehm papers :Jl.>-3662 a.ft 5pn1• Qual1!y 11ork. Reas. Llc <;1 1. t 0 p 1 f •-no .. 1 5-7 71--~s.-2--9 1n the ana on.~ .4.L'S GARDENll'IG ltii. J -'JJ, IJ · mente areas. for gard'i•n ing & s m at J PROF. painting, .l\lso roofi<, DAILY PILOT landscaping ~erviccs. call 1u·cous. t•eil, 1nter/ex!rr. .f.12~'.?0 ~~5198 evts. Sc r vi n:;:: Lir ns. l-'rtt f's!. ti4.)...jJ91. BRIGl-tT ambiliouR \\'Oman Ne11·port, Cd:\l. Co~ra .~tcs.a, PAPER HUNG $30. 10 livC'·i~ 1s ~lpe1· & com· Dover Shore~. \Vcstehrt. Any rn1 . + papr.1-. 646-24•19 panion for my "·!ft> tor 'l or AL'S Landscap1n~. 1· r r c Plaster P•tch Repair 3 11·Ja. Call bl't11·n 4 4 10 1''n1-0val. Yard N>n10l'lrhn)it. ' ' p111. 5:>1--0634 C.1\1. Tras~ hau~ing, lot ~!canu_p. • PATCH PLAST.ERING CAf'ETERIA, <--"'prrienct>-:> rtrµair spr1 nklPrs. 61.rll66. All typrs. F'ree estunates. hours. \\'omf'n 01-.r «l. EXP. J1q1a11r~r Gat-dPnrr. Call 540-68'.?j 6t4-1991. ():m;pll'll' Ynr.J Service Plumbing I .iii.iii;ii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii'"' C!ean-u11. frrt> Est . CASUAL LABORERS ;i,_2o;1 rLu>1mNc REPAIR Urgently Needed -----.-.-~-No joh 100 s1nall LAN~~AP I NG. 1'e11• ~1~·ns • 6-11-:~l28 * e Must have transportation & .:ipr1nklrn~. R cs 1 d I . . pbo Con1111. StalP I. I c · d . SAVE: on home repairs. fo"rf-e & lele ne. jSJ-1+16. esL. plumbins::. pa int, In-Interim I I · h r Personnel Servic• PROf'.i::SSION.'Al. 1ree \\'Ol'k. :~a",3.,2•. tions, RULl\lt: °""""" 778 \V. 20th, C.M. prun111c:. 1r11nn11ng, spray· 642-ra23 546·2592 ing, sprink!£'1·s. Latulscnfl" COLE PLUMBING ing. cleanup. cro1J:c 646-589:: :!,\ hr. :;crvi<'r. 615-1161 CLERK TYPIST QUALITY lawn s r rv !cr, Remodel & Rep•lr El~. typewriter. SO w.p.m. rrliable, rtasonablt" fref' ,,_.,,.,,.. , . 10 key addilw mach. Tele- r ~ 1 i "'a 1 e H 8 I loran HEi<.10DEL1NG. addlllon!I, phol\f' cxper neceu. Apply !Mi.2-9703. . ' patioR, prompt se.rvicc. Free 1741 Placent ia, C?lf 1-3 pm. ..,...,.==="°"==-,.-I C'Sllmntl's reference~. 10<'111 * LAN_DSCAPING * huiklcr. 1~10 p.m .. 968-!nii, Nc1v la111ns, Spl'iuklrs. decks, !IQl--096.t cl~'anup. State Jic'd. J36-1225. ii·cA~N~D7Y~,7fA~N~-~l-gt,._ -p7lu-m~b_,-&1 LA\VN SERVJCF. rlr<'1 1-rp, Ph. l>t'fOl't' !l Ai\f Cut·Edgc-Trin1 [)(>pen<lahlC' or art 6:30-9 Pi\1. <19:.Z-.'>863. Call eves .al1. 6. :H~3766 R 1. oo 1ng 1-...... ;,..-..,,....~....,,... • T. r.uy Roofing .. Deal 00'.,-.,,.,----:--:-• I Dirert. I clo my O\Vn '''Ork. BY Moosl': Lt, rleC't, plu1nh, fcrl<:<'. I n s I I n s. i'-'"-'-'o-'-'so_,.,,5_,1,_s-_9:>_90.,,·~.,-- rarpcno')'. 1\!r. l~A/:'>tC Sewing/ A1t1ra fions G1n1r•I S1rvic1s card. 552-8919. -------- TOTAL SERVICES CO. Alterations -642.5145 Plumbg InstaU's-Carpentzy Neat, acc.·1.n·ate. lO years l'Xp. Elte Repair • 646-1809 Stereo Repair COMMERCIAL TELLER E xperlenc9d l-'ull Time & Part T.ime -UNITEO- CALIFORNIA BANK 7902 Edinger Avo • Huntington Beech 147-1111 or 546-ms F_,q11al Oppor. Employer I H1uling STEREO equipmf'nt rep;;;,J !!!!!C!!!!O!!!!!N!!!!S!!!!T!!!!R!!U!!C!"Tf!!l~O!"N'!!!!!'~I Ilg) I I ~ ---------·I t'Omplet e facilities ~or sll LOAN OFFICER Services .and Repairs ~ YARD. garage c J e a n u p s • n1 ::ike~ &: n1odels -discount 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~·;;~ Re1novc lrf'r.'I'., dirt, ivy, rates: 8 track tape deck, Xlnt oppor, for appni.lar_ In lost and Found I s ki p Io a d er• backhoe. clt':an & adjttSl $8.00. !his r cs I ~entlal construction 841-"""'". \1·eek 11.00 off lo Dail Pilot de~t in ~la l\fesa. Rc--LOST vie. Ne\\'J>Orl & Wilson, Costa r.1esa, G c r m a n Carpet Service Shepherd, 4 mo. Dark _S_T_E·A-M--C-.,-,,.-, -C-le·,-.,-,-,, \1·/1\·hile on face, !eet & professional at lo 1v c s t tnil. AnS\\'ers to "Pagan." price.~. 3 avg rms c.'Omplelc Call lda, J18-91:ii No. 214. 7 $39.9~. 962--06i2. 1 p.m. to 11 a.in. Re"•ard! LOST: "ROCKY," 10 mo old long haired black cat, "'ear- inc: Ilea collar. Vic. of lla1n- iHon, Victoria, Bay SI. Arra o[ Costa Mesa. If any infor- n1ation concerninJ: his 1vhereabouts please ca ll 548-7881 aft 5: 30 pm Reward R E \V A R D Golflcn RetrlevtT. F'em. Lost Vic: 1·alber! & ;\lagnolia. Collar says Ruff. Long-Bch. & G.G. lags. 96S-9j39. LOST Sun. l\tay 7, !'imall grey/black Schn11u7.er-P~ die. F'lt>a rollaJ'-~li~hl lin1p. ti-16-1982 IV ic: fo: a ~I s i d{' (:.)I. I. HEAVY OUTY CARPENTERS RACK fo'or GMC or Chevy Truck With 8' Bed. Good Condi1io n • .. .. .. .. SG5 642·8223 CUSTO:'tt l\'ood1\'0rk panel- ing. Cabinets. Gen'! repa ir~. Aft. 5 Ph. Duke DaDurka, 6·1&-7~8. EXP. R<:modcling. cabincls, repairs, niaint. No job too sm . Reas. 6-16-122-1. C1m1nt, Concrete JO!li''S PATJOS & BLOCK \VOR!\ -'WO Y quu'ts a min. ot 2 yn e:.per. LOCAL moves, hauling, r e A rl e r 8 <!lepla~ement In appra:iaing residential &: clcnnup. Exp college ~tu-ne~dlc!I & c-artndgl!S ~ ~lfl. small income unit.I "'/M>me cl t ' • t k R 53' J846 U .. ".i.A. S!ereo E q u 1 l'I . t t I I ndl en ...,g ruc-es ··-' \Vart:11ouse, 179 E. 17th St, c 0 n 11 ru e . 0 n e "- YARD trash •"'•ge clean· C .1 11 64-?•·•i preJerable. Tius pos!Uon In· • OS a ' f','l(l, ;,-_..... I I ,__ ··-·· '!aUo •. up. i\love & haul. Tree rritn· , . c U< es ..... 11 MMICJ n • niing, rototilling. 548-586.1. T1lav1sion Re'p•1r huilder contact. ltfusl ha~'1! -apprai~cd 11i th a financial \"al'd & Garage Clean Up. * BLAINE'S TV * i n s t i 1 u t ion . Call Mr. Tree Ren1oval. 1-Tcfo Est. Servicing All BNl n<L~ DaWton, 546-lj(JJ. Rca8. Rate!!. &46-3488 Kn<n"·n for honesty 540-4.113 CALIFORNIA YARD & Garage Cleanup. FEDERAL SAVINGS F'rec e:;t, 7 rlays. Call I II i r l COOKS nnytimr, 548-,j(JJJ E•yment f : ?11G:\1T TRAINEES Yard & Garage Clea n Up. Ke11tucky Fried Chicken Tree Removal. Free Es!. Over 18 yrs, old. Part lime A Reas. Ratl!ll. 646-3488 Job '.YantiG, ,:'imali 702 fuJI lime e_mployment. Call YARD & Gntage Cleanup. tor appt. 61H9GO. _ Freo est. 7 days. Call NEf..::D help at home? \Ve CREDIT CASHIER anytlme, 548-5031. have ~ides • Nursc11 • i\lust bo exper. 5 da y 1W!ek. Heating & Air Housekttpers • Com· 40 hn. Good co. benefits. Conditioning pa~lon11 • Homemakers . LaMOn'1 Jewtlen UpJOhn. S47-6681. ffunlington Center Nc1v conslructk>n or 1"11:istini:-B A B B y s t T T I N G . 7777 Edinger Ave., No. 65 blrlgs. Res. or commercial HouKecleanlng, ffungari1n Huntington Beach Air Conditioning, !·Ilg. Cooking, Gar<l.-ning .Jo b --- Lo~T-. -"';-, -Go~\-Vr-.• -1 -& An Associate <>f R. R. lluggin!I Co. 642·0-jJS \\'<1ntcd . :;.",t;-8j39. DAY HOSTESS Sllltlcr. large n1a!r black Van 's Landscaping, OranlJ:".'. 486 Newport Blvrl .. N.B. 1\'IATIJRB Lldo R et id c n 1 Lah .~ small hon c y Re.~. 646-8149 Buii. 639-9i92 "·ould like baby~itting for Hous1cleanir.9 cockapoo. PlcaSt' ca 11 CEMENT \\'Olli-:. no job too <lay11, n i le s / 1v k-e n d Ii . R-17-flM a.fl 5. 1'mall, reasonable. r rec ---------61" '"'·' W.nt Your House ~~~-~=·-~~o-z-=-= A vacuun1 .:•o ""'1,·. Cl11nad For Summer? Help Wanted, M & cleaner front back or truck -~-~~-----~ J:'uU Tin1e Apply In Person * * iijijijijijij~ijijij~~~~~~~~~~~l~~~~~~~~~~;~~ I r N Dus TR t L Lstini. JI. s t u r I i c k • ::-. F 710 ~ Call Dutch for carpclll, ARE YOU * * * Ilg) Ilg) ~n :if;::r ~;~~3~:0· Frwy p:e~10~~1~~k. s, !1~%:e, ~~~~.I wlndo1vs & Iloon, 531·1508. In nPcd of extra income? * Lolt Md fOlhf I Lost and found ---------Answering Scrv. 24 hNI. f••ll ''Pt-time. r -u 64"5390 -. . RE\VARD! Rro\l:n poodle-rPn1ove. S~S-86611 for est. .._.. .... fem. Lost ~lesa del Mar For A Cement Conrrac!or JAN ITORI~L Couple .10 ATTRACTIVE \lo'Omen, pal1 Trader's Paradise Found lfrM adsl 550 Found (frM ads) 550 area -l\luch mis:;cd -:lease Call For !\fax clean offices. \Ve ru_rnish & f/time ope,Ungs for FOUND toy Dachshund , \\·earing bro\vn c o I I a r . -tu,n•. 'I' roon_ i\! * * * 644--0687 equipment & s u pp I 1 es , I~ lit & '" ,,. ..>-'00!!'7 54-5617 11'01n ... n w , ......... na y FN_D. Male l-hi.'1'.ky Vic: ~ii!"'ii!"'ii!"'~~~~~~ FLOOR \\fork & patro.~. ME,_SI ·Cl . C 1 111nhilion. S11b111.an1ial earn-16 Fashion laland Newport Beech rt.JU. Camper-Datsun Toy- ota P.U. Used Uttle, slttp1 4. T~de for car compar- ~-B &: \V TV for retrlg. J$tt atove for r~. 548-0203 HA VE' NEV ADA LAND. 273 ACRES. TRADE ALL dR PART. FREE & CLR. OPEN TO ALL TRADES. M'\'.J::R."'i. 6i3.fii5ti. SllVERAOO 0 r a n gr . rbugh • beaut. fl11·y, Ulll. SIOOO. acre. future growth ~a.. Consider l(l:C de5C11 or arazing t"arlCh . 838-4651. • SAILING Trimaran I: er. w/sails, boat never 11\ water. Trade for lo t or!? 548-8715 ~ ea.ta l\tesa L,U<E.C:OLr Jot o...,.n. A,500 cleat. Want luxury *· aircraft. yacht, Apt1. dtllnond. Qy,·ne.r ~ Bolero Wty, N.8. 646:7667, I *-* * lines times dollars HAVE $90,000 Beverly Hills arta home. Want· Newport Beach area home. \Vill trade up. By owner. \Viii consider other exchanges, 542-8287. \VANT URGENT: I-louse: Ne1vport Bch, CdM $40's or $50,000'11. Hav~: Actt!I, San Dimas, Hou!IC-acrts Upland nr ? 12131 457-2624. !!AVE 2 br·pool linrbor Vil'\\' hon1e In CdM, \\'anti ttfltal un its Jn !~arbor area or nice home In Palm Des- ert area. Aat. 675-72Z CPI. I Pon1on_a A\'c ., bCll1•cen 19th & 20th. MB-6997. GERi<.1AN Shepherd puppy, bt'\\·n & Ian, nr. Villa~ Shop. Center. !\!csa det ll1ar. C.M. ~7-18i9. FOUND white rabbit ln Costa Mesa High School back field. P lease identify. 545-8992. FOUND in Talbert • Beach area. 2 black rocker type pups, about 4 months, 1 malt, 1 female. 847-~75. Fnd, boys Schwinn Stln~ay nr. flnrbor High School 5'18-4210. SlfAU.. Black, malf", cOckf'r? \\'ashinglon/Harbor, "1 c. Santa Ana. 521-1661. Wf.TNO bulldo1::. llunlingron ] ., lk , , 1 caning. arpe s, '""' 10 •lart '"/op~r. loo· \\'esr of lfarbor -East of ~ 1 nvc1vays ,{. s1 r11•11 s. . / ·~ • ~ ' ______ _,] ~ _l_·•_ .. _.,1_,~·· .'.".'.''_•'_•·'.'.·_"_., 1:.-_ "S>". windo1vs, floors ol<:. Res1d mgmt rv.icition. No ex""r Brookhunl _near \Vllson. lns.truction -" '' ,,. ,..,, " 'I ••7 142 '" 4111 ~ "' 1.'0lll • JJ -6 · ,,...,-· reqd. Flexible hr11. bul liOmt. Equal Oppor. Employer J\:lu~t identif .. »18-766:l call Child C•re anylime. BAY ,t: Beach .Janitorial. eves. pref'd. Use nl car ~-~'!'".!~""'~~~~~ F"ND .• fl.tale _ Sma1l lka•l' -CHILD CARE _ t:rpts/1vindo"·s/floor!i etc. llf'Cf'!!s. ror lntrodUC'tory ln· DENTAL ASSISTANT Schools & _ Dependable _ Resicl!Comm 'I. 6•16-1401. IPrvic\v Call 968--5739 or r>oc!or seeklng 1'.ULL Y l"X· like dog. Black \v/bro\v11 t'nstruct1'ons 575 · d h · ·d · 1 Jlarl>or & BakC'r arra • oor-.fESTlC \\/ORK e 54&-6407. presence t air 111 e a!lsls · ~--~-~-~-~~ ing lot. C.:\f. <Harbor Shop. !'A6-414:i EXPERIENCED AIDES & Hou!lt'kecpers for B . Center). !145-4;>n. • * \h1lh tu!or\ng, c1·cdrn-C o-0-n-tr_a_c-to_r _____ O\l'll tranllporlntion 836-859'.l l'Onv. hoip. N.B. people. Great hourli. eauh· tin led ror 1;radc 7 thru 12. -' -64z_24JO ful office. S&luy open. 1''0UND small black dog 673-8;i18. • • • 8 • • D1dicated Cleaning Phone 835-8333. with tan feet rit':ar Spring-FATllER & SONS -* \VE DO EVERYTHING * ADMINISTRATIVE DENTAL asslsttint or ~P' dale &. F..dinger, llun· [5J Ot-corating, design, c.arpen· Rt':ts. Free est. 646.2839 ASSISTANT tion\11t. Nev.·~rt Be a ch lington Beach. 846-8Zl.5. I Scrvic91 and Res*rs I try, plumhlng, wiring, etc. JJOUSE Cleaning. t•ut, ef. Trade a.toe M\V In Wlllhlre orthodontic otflce! • tern· FND. Siamese -tl!male. . . 4 generation!! exp .• 25th yr. licienl, meticulous. CaU area movln'g to N.B. at ye1tr porary 4-6 wlaL. Starttna: Vk>let point. Vic: Bushflrd It. Jn bus. _ Lic'd & bonded. llelen, 67>-0J10 or 54S..7191. end. Net<! Adm A~t \\'/good l\fll)' 15. Orthodontic exp. Banning, 1-1.B. at least 2 838·3545 CLEANING Speclali111: Win-acctng backgrnc.I. Send rtq, 64:Z-.~. \\'k!. 962-:i9~)-l. Ba bysitting e • • • e • dow.~. carprl, !loo r.s, stoves Rrsun1t & salary rpquirc· DENTAL Aulstant, chair- PUPPY, po,i;. half poodle, t.10'l'l-IER will habyllit in my ROOi<.f A<ldilions, Eslima1cs, .r.z ovcni;, 774--0321. mrntl! re> \\'estern Growrrs 11ide. 2 yrs. experience. Call hatr S<'hnauzrr. ma Ir , Mm('. Oay11 or eves. Tl£~ plans & ln)Olll. $.ingle .,r 2 \l/JIAT You Sre rs \Vhat vOu A>1:-IOC'Jflt 1on. :lO!ll · \\'ilshire bahl't"en 10 & 3. Good u.Jary blondf' A-eh!lrcCM\I , Lagu1u1 E-:11: Call 11ny1un1• -ll H -~lory. r.:r. C11nstrurl1on. r.1·1! Clt'l'lt1fns: Donr Thr Blvd., L.A. :xxllO. & bt>nelits av 11 11 ab le . Niguel Terr11rr. 499-41;'6(). R47·i!YJ6. !!47-1~11. llrs1 \V11y Yrt! ~1-lll-f1.li1. -ALTERATION LAOY-, _,_1s-_:_.;s_s. -------t Lost 555 Carpet Service Addi1ion111 • H.rmOOrl1111; land«"aping \Vanttd 10 \vrk. In dry cle-.in-DENTAL asllislanl, cleaning Sheraton porking lo1. 121:}1 LOST . :'>Ioli• Argh;in. \0 n10, TO 9-~91. Ap1·ieot·Blk rn11sk • Sick .~ F"E.\1ALE DoJtie n1ix, vie nttds ttt:atment -Vk:: 27th Paularino &: Red I-fill. C.;\1. SL NB. 61>-17-il/67~. 1:rr'\\·L('k & Son. Lil'. int phu11 In Huntln11:ton ln.~truction11, X·raya le tom~ .H)llN'S Ca rp<'t ,t: U11hols1cry GiJ...tiOll * ~>4!}-.~liO e TOP SOIL e Rearh at'f'I\. l\lu~t be' \\'llling front otrlce. Non-1moker. ('lrane1·~-F.xlrit l)r!.Sham-JAC K-T-aU'i " ne-Rc~ir Fill dLrl, rolotl111nf & to 1£'Arn olher p/\a:k'! or prtfer3bly und~r 3 I?. poo fret' Scotchguard <Soll grading. 540--0091 bu~ine~s. Salary Open. Call, .:6:.c~..:::c"c.· ___ ~--·I H.etardanlsJ. Degntasel'$ & remod .. addit. 20 )'TS, c:<p. 812-2QJIJ. 'DENTAL a s t l a tant, II -lor br'•hle••r1 •-10 Lie'd, My \Vay Co. 547--0036. Masonry a '-V 'fl '"' "' ___ ;.... ____ AJ>ART.\-tENT llf an a ge r chairJ1ide. ?11 inimum t yr ~~.,..,...,.-·,....--,.---....,.~ 1 LARGE Reward • no ques- 2 black female doa• • wilh tions asked. U>st • Irish Set· ---------1 collan. Santa Ana Helght11. ter. 4 • 15/17, Balboa area. 30' T/SOlrta.Bff.ut (clear) 557-2674. 673-4483. minute ble11ch for "'hlte Drlvewey1 REPAJRS, planttrs, brick. u•/hR:iil.y husband. XI un1tll txp. \Villifll to lf!arn t'X· carpets. Save your money hhx:k, stone. Quality work. In 3 m l hldp. Ma ture ptnded duties. Call 9 to 5. by 111.v!ng me extra trips. 1-fA\VLEY'S Stal Coating: Ph Re Id ""!TIO 647 2~9 Xtr.u. $4500 value for ~ ton PU 1 FE"tALE Collie, v I e, LOST-Marguerite A Ocean · • camptr or Delmar & Orange, C.l\1. Blvd. 1Iale Blue point * 962-4X3 Call to Identify, ~l31. Sta.me~. Rl"A·ant 675-4793. cvts, v;knd.~. FOUND in Fountain Valley, RE\VARD. 6 mo. old black Grey mixed male Ttrrl<!r. lab. Oni: whlle spot tront of * * Callar onl)'. 96)-1726. tlic!!I. Vk: Cd?tt. 67i-89Xl. f'ut ttaula Art JUll • J)honr M1ll tw1y • 642-.'6~ Deity Pilot Wanl ha~tilns 1t•loN'. Ads hsve l di I II. h ·i -1· 1 nl Ken. . s . .,.,,.. . adults no chlldren or ptts.1 .:__-:;;~.:_:.c·--~--~·l \Vl J clean llvlnR rm.. n ng 'Cnt er. gaic. 01 ... is a . • 8 rm. t.: hAll $IS. Any rm. Stays black. 54S-.5195. Painting I \\lalk lo beach In H. · D f. NT AL R.e(eptionts:f, $7.50, couch $10. Chelr $5. 15 Elictrlcai P1p1rh•ntint 8f6...3927, minimum one )T tXll. yn .. txp ia ,vnat eoont1, no\ 8ABVSITT£1t & lltt l'IOuM lnsuranct & bkkP&· ~fiaalon method. 1 do "'Ork my1i!!f. ELECTRICAL \\'ORK. All PAll'iTlNG & PAPERING. cltanln11. 1 small baby. Viejo. 8JO-Ji9-I. Coott rt:f, 5..ll--0101. k1mJ11. Big nr J1matl wc·d &• Ill )U in Harbor 8/'tll, lk A: 1 dill.~• ,.,'f'tit:-6~1'4~.. Of;\IAI. Ott. 01·~! SUratl')' -.-eARP,£1' LAYING-.. -Ina. Jo'rtt r~t. ;,.t6-011 \. ~11l<_!"" n~r, f~-llllo-2306. BAKER. r;k"s ff ~.,,i;.,-fun A.o:,.;t whh x·11y c ~rlenee •• (' ~ PA r;fo. ~-m-:-1h7t1.en1 urirtrr ,,.o A i:oorl '".!Int aa 1s a rood lime, Apply in ptl:'On nmrn· I 111 n1 ""I a !,.. o pentng. • !;42-10ill • a-~ th" Prnnv P1nrtw't hiv•·~!m,.nl Inv.. l:J10 \\I, 811krr, r .\f :.i ~.riltl ---·--·--------________ , r . • DAll.V PILOT lu..tay, May 9, 1972 llilJ ~' ;;L . ...,;;-~ .____L• ... _•00••___,l[Il][ ~...... l[JJ]I L-··· llilJI '--_L .... _ •• _l[Il) .__I _~_,.-_j[fl)t;;I _ .... _-·_·.;]~~I Help Wontocl, M .. F 710 Help W•nltcl, M .. F 71~ Help Wonttd, M .. F 710 litlp W•nll<I, M' F 7IO ..!olp Wonted, M .. F 710 Help Wanfod, M .. F 710 Help Wanted, M .. F 710 Holp W•ni.cl, M .. F 710 Antiques llO l[iJJ L ~·~··· * DentaJ usls1ant, p.'\r1 lfOUSE~!AN, mode r ate time, up'd pref'd. Jtn1gn janitorial work, pre.fer ovtr Stach. 96'2-6611. 40. The HWllifliton, 18851 DENTAL a.uL orthodontic:. Florida, H.B. 842-7788. chairskk exp'd, front <>t back. cJ1 am 842-7775. lnduslrl•f DRAPERY WORKROOM Expe:r. blind hemmer k trm-. Beach Ora~ry Se rv. 900 \\', 17th. C.M. DRIVEWAY .salesman, full & part time. ?i.1ust be exp. in tirt & shock 511.lt'S. Top pay commia1ion, le fringe be~flt&. Apply J a ck ' 5 Phlll.ip11 66, 462i '''· Coai11 Hwy, N.B., ~ily betl'.1een 2 " •. INDUSTRIAL ENGINEER A nt>w company Just fQrm<-d by Amt>rica'.s leading devel· oper Of rfilidt nfl8 l commun- itie11 is now 11taftlnr: 1t:o; <>P. eratlon in Orange County. II ha" developed an exciting ~w cencr:pt in factory·bullt modular housing. EARN extra money at home, addreSfiing, mailing or 1~ ing letters. Many companie1 \\'t have an immediate nttd nttdlng worken. Send SI for a graduate Industrial en· for listing. HOME\VORK. ginerr with al lean 5 yean i;"°"::;,:4f>6:::., ..:H::..B=·---,,,=c;ol recent ex('lf'rlence In the mo- EARN top money. Flexible bile home or fat>iory-bu11t hours in fa 8 c in at i n g housing induBt cy. This ex· busineSli. Full/p. l I m e. periencr must incorporale 642--3313 ask tor Sandy. rt>fi ponsibililiclf for the de- :o;ign of special gigs & fix-* ELECTRONIC Assem-lures as used in this lncfu11- blen. Prefer exper. S2 try, Jn addition, there mus! & up hr. Nice 11mall ro-be significant experience in Irvine Comple~. S.10-1665 for plant de11ign & layout. tlme t;i"iiPPii'ii· ..................... ;I & flow !>ludy, &: in the M-1· 11 ection of certain materials ESCROW OFFICER used ln construction of thi!! Positk>na available in several proclucr, A knowledge of re. of our otficea for Escrow lated manufacturing engin- Officers w/a min, ol 2-5 eering tt"Chnlques i11 al110 re· yrs. exper. in conventional quired. loans. Must be capable of handling own desk. Salary commensurate y,•fexper. caJl Mr. Etchison, 541)..1500. CALIFORNIA FEDERAL SAVINGS ESCROW TRAINEE: Work '\\oith great bos1. Meet Im- portant people. Plush office'. Good skills. $133. Call Linda Ray, 540-60.)5 Coastal Agency \Ve offP.1' an attractive start· ing aalary in addition to a liberal package of benefil11, P lease llt'nd your resume fhandwrllten i1 fine or caH immediately •• , Bob Swank OMNI HOUSING SYSTEMS, INC. 17821 Gillollo (Irvine Indus. Complex)' S1nt1 An• LVN-RELlABLE }'<>r Stead}' IJosltloa • Call 5-19-306l • l\tAJL clerk • f'\ill time. No exp. nee_ Pt!rm. poe. Start S400 1no NS 644-43$) Maintenance Man i·or Orange Counfy Based fttstauranl Company PhOne For Appl. f7J4) 540-9892 Far West Services, Inc. 1672 Reynolds Avt Sant• An• Equal Oppor. Employer MATERIAL CONTROL SUPERVISOR A nf>W company just rormtd by Amttlca's leading de\'el· oper ol residenl.ial c:ommuni- tie!I i11 naw stafling its op- eration in Orange County. JI has developed an exciting ne\V concept in factory-built modular housing. INTERVIE\VJNG M on & Tues 9 am-2 pm \Ved thru Fri 9 am-12 pm ON SITE 01-~ OUR NE\V BUILDING PACIFIC MUTUAL F ASHJON ISLAND {Corner Santa Cruz &: Ne"·port Center Drive) time, experienced Real Es· Do late Salesmen. Better than average commission, com- PallY paid major medical. Tremendoua oppty. tor man- agement. \Ve have some- thing dillerent. Drop in and talk it over. you want ..• $ $ 2700 Harbor Bl at Adams FASHION stylist tor Beeline. No collec:flon, df!t ivery, or invest. Work own hour11. Will train. Marcy, 541-9586; 54&-007. FIBERGLASS Molden;, skill· (714) 137-6050 Equal Oppor, Employer One-or the key posilion! tn lK! filled is that of material c:ontrol 11upervisor. Qualified candidates should have al least 5 years ttcenl related experience, preferably in the mobile or modular home induMry. They must have a c:omprchensive understand- ing of material rontrol, both ra\v materials & fin isht'd goods, production control & scheduling, Ir must be e:<· pert in perfonnin~ materint take-off!. Jn addition, "'c * FREE daily b u s lransportation for work in Los Angeles cntll move to Ne"•port. Sept. '72. eQ &: unskilled. All 3 shittll. IM!\1EDlATE opening for in- We \\•Ill train. 1631 Placen-telligent girl, ~tail credit tia Co11ta MHB. work in young, front office. prefer experience in relating ..,,..,...,..,..,..,..,...,. this operation to EDP con· F'I~LD Service & Imtall1_~_3236 __ . _____ _ trol sy11tems. \\'e offe.r &n attNlclive starting salary ln ad<lilion to -a Jlberal package of ben- efits. Please send your re!- ume <hanffivritten is fine) or cell Immediately , •• '"""""''· ''"'"' d oo' INTERVIEWING o Pert.~. E~perienc:ed fndependent 1t1ovie Co film· ,v/rools or ~·111 tra111. ing on location in Orange 64z..38XI. C.O. Interviewing local rtlli· FIGURE ON AN EXCITING JOB • S.c'y·Slono Openings avail. no\v: Type 50. lite steno. Type 60, Steno 90 e General Clericel Math or Eng\lsh back. ground necess, Ofc. e.'<per, pref'd. Jr, & Sr. Openings Avail. dents for possible e"Xfl'a IE bit pa1"l11. For Appointment, Ca11 (213) 464-3121. lllMNE PERSONNEL SERYJCES•AGENCY Sec'y/R.E. 1'.tklng lo $700 Sec'y/Crim. Law to SCIO Secretary/lite llh · to $525 Bookkeeper lo $600 OMNI HOUSING SYSTEMS, INC. 17821 Glllotte !Irvine Indus. Complex)· Santa Ana Inwicing Clerk $1150 Prod. Conttol Clerk S43.'J {714) 837-6050 Clerk Typists lo S-425 Equal Oppor. Employer Tech/Med \Vriler S.'XXl _....;,.,...,..,.,..,....;.,.,,.I Keypunch/Schlni ok to $450 l\1 A T U R E "'Omen-general P/Time Typist $2.30 hr. offiet'-in medical re 1 at c d AIP Clerk to S450 busine11s. f\18 area. Medical Sec'y/F ash. Isl. io $550 exp. helpful. \Viii train for e Keypunch 1''ree & Ftt Positions \\'Ork y,·/patlen1s. Speeify ?i-1uS1 have 6 nlO'!I \\'Orking 488 E. 17th (at Irvine) CM •age, cxp, ref. 'V r i I e expcr. on either a keypunch, 642~1470 Classified Ad No. 389. Daily keylape, or key disk device.[,.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!' Pilot, P. O. Box Jj6(), Costa 1NTERVIEW1NG ?i-lon &. Tues 9am-2pm Wed thru Fri 9am-l2pm ON SITE OF OUR NE\V BUILDING PACIFIC MUTUAL F"ASlllON ISLAND <Cornt>r Santa Cruz le Ne,vport Ccnter Drive) * FREE daily b u s transportation for "·ork in l-'"i Angelt>s until move to Ne\,·porl. Sep'-'72. FULL OR PART TIME Couplrs or individuals fo1· local "'Ol'k. No age Jimil. JANITORS, exper., 3 -6 Meosa, Calif. 926M. hrs/night J.·1on.-Fri., t o MATIJRE man, pe1·manenl & \\'Ork in San Clemena El draft exempt needed by Toro, Crown VaJJ " & furniture design store for Laguna Beach area• Call dellvery. installation ,'.;, 71 4: 6~1601. rela1ed dutil"S. Exp'd-pref. JANITORIAL Service ~need!! Salary open. Call 714 : p/timl' help, men & "umen. 492-4131 for appt. 9 to 5: 30. Call 979-3652. ~1EDTCAL OB-Gyn. office JANITOR, exper. tor hosp, N.B. Call ~Z-2410 ronv. J .C. PENNEY CO, F•1hion l1l•nd NewPort Be•ch Requires HARDWARE DEPT. HEAD requ!T't'S f'xp'd bAck office girl & lronl office girl ~·/insurance exp. Send resume to P.O. Box 3992, Long Beach, 90803. !\10TEL Maid-Exp'd Housekee~r abil!lies. Apply in person, Newport Beach Travelodge, MGR. TRAINEE Call 540.0928. t-U LL or p/H~-&rviN? CARPET DEPT. rstabli~lu:d Fullrr Brush SELLING SPECIALIST s Needed NO\V! Top SS$-No cxpcr, nee. Just ambition. Full <>r p/lin1e. Call \\'ilson, 833-1177 JO &m·S pm . PLANT SUPERINTENDENT \\'e oner an allractivr starting salary in addilion to a liberal packRge of hen- efils. Pl£"ase send your re- sume lhand,vritten is fine} or call in1mediately .•• Bob Swank OMNI HOUSING SYSTEMS, INC. 17822 Gillallo (Irvine Indu!. Complexl Santa Ana 1714) 137-6050 Niles, Experienced 21 Or Over Apply In Person 1555 Adams Ave. Costa Mes• SALESGIRL: Camera & film lmo~·ledge a must. Apply bet~·een 9am-noon. Dav£'s Ca mera Exchange -474 E. 171h Ci\1. --------~ SALES: Some e x p ~ r . Fashion & sportswear. f'ull or P/Time. MI Z-2444, Mr1. O'Malley. Equal Oppor, Employer SALESLADY -ror children"s ,,.,..;.,.~.;,..,..,..,..,.,.., a pp are I shop-Must be R00~1 & Board, share home mature & have ex p. Call in exchg for ('hild care & P.trs. Auld 644-7014 art, 6pm. lite duties. t.-lother '~/1 SALES-P/lime. Neat young child, teenager or Spanish man needed 2 eve~ & Sat speaking a c cep t able· a m. $2.25 Hr. 534-308I. S."S-8464. 9:30-1:30. 837-7772 ~=--'----- all 2 "' AUTO SALESMAN ('ustonirr!I. OOZ.Ot1G. FURNITURE DEPT GELCOAT TOUCH-UP SELLING SPECIALIST Top pny~xperlenerd. NEEDED-exp. co11metologist F,qunl Oppor. Employer follo\ving pre!. ~ or I ~~;,,,,,~ ...... ~~ ............ ~, 494-6139. PRINTING. OffM!t printin~ ROBINSON'S e NEWPORT e BEACH for one of Orange: County's leading Import dea.le.r1. lfigh volumn small sales force. Apply lo 1i1r. Bill Stnith Call Bob Londresi; Coastal Recreation, Inc. 642-811)() GENERAL heJpe1· !Wedf'd, !<i. O. cookini; c:t p c r i enrr hrlph1I. Apply Darm. Point Yarht Club, Dar\8 i\ta.r1n11 aitrr I pn1 driily. GENERAL 11ffiCf' girl, :; dAy week, 10 key ad<llnl:' mach., typing & gt.ll{'ral tlutieli. 6#-1700, f'XI. 519. 5 GIRLS Needed 101med . Part &: flti~. No exp, nee. Over 21. Cilll Lord Cah•1n, 833--1 177 10 nm·5 prn. AUTOMOTIVE SELLING SPECIALIST Exl'cllrnt \\'Orklng f'o nds. Outsl!Ulding benefits Apri\y In Person 10 AM·4 P~f '24 Fashion Island F_,qun l Oppor, Employt'r legal Secretaries GUU: • 6' !all or over, Newport & S. An• part1opate 1n ~lology rx-Xlni po!!it\on!I \\•/top f1M'Q1t pttimtnl. Up lo $30 per eve. a\'ail. immed. If you hllVC &4~1&ft 6:.'.11 pin. lop skills & recent Calif. e:<· GROCERY chttke.r full tlmt in friendly foca) Jn.l'ltkt1. 33.f7 East Co&at Hv.'y .. Corona dtl Mar, 6'13--3SIO, Mt. Adams. GUARDS. per. Long term. /\pply in ptn;on !) TO 1 Pi\l PNLY s.1.s. TE~tPORARY S>.:RVICE H» SO. GIWID Sant& Ann 5'17-177.6 PATROLMEN..._, UVE·IN flou,.k,.putcom· Pmn.ailcl'll u&lanmtnL C. PAnk'ln for 1 a dulf. 5 d~ M. Laguna attaa. Full It 'A"efk. Refs. 54."~26. par: tl.nW:. Prnn. P'.Y. Lile tns., 9onu1. PaJd va. Uke. 1,1 trade'!' Our TndE'r's Apply SUJte C Pandlw. catumn it ror you! m No. Grand. S.A.. 5 line11, daY11 tor s b_gd<i. ' NE\VCOMER \VELC0~1ING ; ING: Hospihtlity l10J'ih-<ss To Call l.OCALL Y on ne1v l'f'Sidcnt fa1n ilies bringing gilts 8.· civic Info. Good pay· P/1in1e. Musi ha\'e hllppy smile, car, typing ability. 5-17-3(19.j. press <>pr. w/A.B. Dick 385 exp<.'r. lrnmed. opening. Ex- cep!ion1tl oppor. ~:/gro,ving nat'/ co. Pcnn. X\nf \\"Ork- ing roods. I: outstanding bencfi1 ~. No. Amer. COl'- responde~ Schools. 4-IOt Bil'C'h St., N .. B !\1n. !\files, 5-16-7360. PROFESSIONAL p b o n e AoJicltor -Druia Point. San Oemenl~, Cap~ area. \Vf)J'k in your own home. J las opening for SALES F/Tlm .. Expor SLEEP SHOP .. FURNITURE MEN'S FRITZ WARREN'S Sport Car Center 710 E. 1st St.. Santa Aua SECRETARY I Congenie.l 'v o r k I n g co~ ditions, xlnt atrno!phert', ideal situation. NURSES Aide!, e x p e r . pref'd . 1 am-3 pm or 11 f)m· 7 Anl , f/lime. P11.rk Lido Conv. JfO!!p., 460 Jo'lagship, NB. 642-80-l·I. . ~URSES-LiC('nsed for hosp. in N.B. S.tl deal 1" ""'"· PhoOle SHOE SALESMAN ~1465 between 9:00 a.m. Busy plant rnanager needs and noon. F /Tlme-Exper assistant to hand!t> variety ronv. Cnll 6·12-2·110 REAL ESTATE NURSES A;d.,, ~'""'" fo• 7. -SALESMEN- 3:'.J} shif!. Apply 14 ~ 5 Need I or 2 t."<pE'rienc-ed Superior Avt., N.B. Mlesprople. lnc:£'ntivt COIU· NO\V ln!ervtewing For mission sliding scale p~. Cocktail \Vaitrem1 & Din-pcrM>nallzed training by a rwr \VAl!tesses. PleRst IP-J)l'Of('lr;sionlll. ALSO will trllln ply In ptt'!!On, Volcano new licenseeA. Small office, !louse. I400 Palisades Rd., pleuant ~"Orkin< condition,,. O>sta r.1esa. PenloMl lntttvlew -Alk ORTHODONTJC for lifllllqtr. Rccept/Scc'y, """" tor U.S~AFFILIATED busy N.B. ofc. Tap Wary Brokers Realt)' PBX OPERATOR Part Time Mon & Fri Nit•• S•tur-d•y All Doy ExceptionAI Bctnelils Apply ln ~n 10.5 p.m. ... 2 Fash'lon tsl., N.B. F.Qual opportw1lty employer of administrative ac1ivitle11. rtequlres good typ i n g , stenographic I.: lt>lephone skills. Call: 1714) 133.0020 Ext. 78 AUDIO MAGNETICS CORPORATION A MA'ITEL C0:\1PANY for quallfim '°""''cnllou• 847-8507, i:v .. 968-1178 DAILY PILOT lndi,·iduo.I. Send N!sume lo • • W h It e ElephAnts" over-Equal Oppor. Employt'r P. o. Box IJ3.t. t683 0rang, running your "°""' Turn CLASSIFIED ADS 1 ""'~""""''l!"'""""""~ A•-.., Co•" M.,.. them fnlo "CASI!" • .,.u FOR ACTION SECRETARY, tow ronn. 2 S<ll the old 11utt a.,, the the"' thnl O.lly P 11o1 CALL 642 56• 7•8 • yean R.E. ecp de•;rable. new 1tuU Clagsftled. fU...567!. • "all Mr. Drown 551--9900. , • Antiques HANDS0!\1E. omate.ly em- bosied bra!s National Cuh reglater. Original bUI or M.lt, under dra"'·er, dated 1917. Beautltul c:nnd. &: good \\Urklng order. Asking $300. &t2-J589 Eve11 le weekends. 111 PHILCO SCRAM-LETS FORD CORP. ANSWERS LOW-Heat Cookware Set • Stainless SleeL Sold · ' demo. $360. Sacrif. $88.. : cash. 534-1148. Aeronutronic Division Ford Road Newport Beach Equal Qppor. Employer ~1ale or female Supervision MANUFACTURING SUPERVISION Bottle -Goose -Kno\vn - Theory -LOOKS llOT Teenager's commen t: "There's a girl \VllO dresses cool and LOOKS HOT." OAK 011:-:ST OF DRA\VERS -Desk, Armoire-, Sq. table, odd cM ir:<1. ~1 isc. 8.~19!1 QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WHITE -YELLOW ~ FORMAL. !ize S. As new '. $16. • ' 642-~ • . ' ==-.,,-.c--.~=-=-1· NICE dinette M:t $25. N' upholS1ered chair $15. 138 E. : 18th CM 548-4485. REESE TRAILER HITCH, ; 450 tonguf' load, like fle\v, 1 $45, 494--0JOO, I CARPET FOR SALE by Carpet Layer, Call • 540-2086 • 75 yrds-pale green shag carpeting. $200. 97'-3768 SHAKLEE PRODUCTS A new company just formed WANT AD by America's leading devel· • oper of residential com-642 It's a breeze .. sell your ~ Intonnation &: Sales. Call 548-5253. munlllrs Is now staffing its •5678 items \\"Ith ease, use Daily , 1 •, operation in Orange County. Pilol Clas!illed. 642-5677. • It hll5 de\'elojll'd an exciting I ~A"u-c"'"ti"on-----~804~ A , ne'!v concept in factory-built ud1on modular housing, \\le have an Immediate need for 2 qualified supervisors for our production opt'ra· lion. Both opening!!, require individuals wilh at lea:o;I 3 yeal'!I rec<'nl experience supervising a mobile home or factory-built home pro- duction operatio n. E.-<per- lence must be in either the area of paint & finish \\'Ork or in the installation of fixtures & <>lher mechanical & interiOr items. \\le orter 3n attractive start· ting salary in addition to 1 lihf'rsl package Of bcnefil!I. Plea~ send your re1ume (handwritten Is fine) or call immedlalcly. OMNI HOUSING SYS~S. INC. 17112 Glllotto (Irvine lndWJ.. Compltx) S•nta Ana (714) 137-6050 Equal Oppor. Emp)oyer TO BE REMOVED FROM WAREHOUSE LOST RARE AND VALUABLE PERSIAN RUGS BY S/$, EX ADVENTURE VOYAGE CLAIM AGAINST AMERICAN EXPORT LINE NOW FOUND U.S. Custom Bond #29619 Cloer«! "Rolots«I Included are fine st and highest Per- sian •nd Oriental Carpets from KA· SHAN, KERMAN, TABIZ, ESFE- HAN, NAJN, ABADEJI, SAROUK, INDIA, CHINA, ARMENIA, RUSSIA, and many m•ny others. Large and small sizes. AUCTION Eich Piece indlvldually to highest bidder •t NEWPORTER INN 110~ J•mborH Road NEWPORT BEACH, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, MAY 11, I P.M. Viewing & Inspectio n from 6 p.m. until time of au ction Auctioneer: COi.. L_EW ROSENBLUM j'E(UIS: CASH or CHECK • ' ; ' • ' ' ' ' • ' ' ~ . ' ' ,, 'I '· ,· • II I ' p • • DAILY PILOT n ( -I[§] I -I~ [ llllRhll •• I~ I 'Nf'·~-J~-I Mi1cell•neou1 811 Ml1cellenoous GLASS BLO\\'ERS! ~ lbs. 1 lh. tubing. 3 tt. long (sell· lng on markcl over $3 lb. l • niake otter! Navy l'l)'lon cords, lS tt., 3 for St. Tobacco culler $8. Sun-pwi>l@d pumpkin .seed \\'hiskey Uasks $.l>S50 ea. ri1oc1el T r~ord wrenches. hub caps, ctr.. S2 ~a., spo!light $.10. Blue navy elbow length gloves, 3 pair SI. Caboose la11terru, 2 vel')' old, $100. Peddlcord's .<JM-16"29 or 2>592 Lquna Canyon Rd. STEREO: 9 piece GatT'&f'd compono11t systr.m, frclsht d a m are d , elt>etronlcally p e rfect . AM/FM/MPX Garrard turntable, a t r 1usl>(ln1ion llpealren, tape det:k, headphoneg, 10 Only were $299.95. Now $!M.. UJw payments. USA Stereo Equip Warehouse, 179 E. l 7th St., Costa !.I e s a • 645-2442. 111 3 LI~, ~Times, $2-00 •••••••••I Boiits, Power 906 Avtos, lmportM 970 Cycles, 8fk.e1, ~ !'h~,=·~ i ~~.~ ',.,:1';;.' :7r w ;~~ E ~ DEAN · LEWIS ,~·::::SA, ci .. n. : *AUCTION* WI PAY TOP Fine Furniture le Appliances Auctton. Fric!oy, 7,30 ~.m. Windy's Auction B•m lm5li Newport, CM - ~:69~t1ens: 1 calico, 2 !~~.R:;~ topirt;~· TOYOTA ~~~· P!I: 4~2CJ18 or blk & v.•ht., l all blk. outriau. SIS radio, elect 5J6..1144. :nonomatic head &: m1tny --,F"R=e•e-K=IT"'T"'E"'N"S.--1 other extras. Tralltr. 1971 CASH DEAN LEWIS VOLVO STEREOS 19i2 Gerrard equipped v•ilh full size prof essio na l c h anger, A~1/FM/Pt1PX recei ver, sea I e d air suspension speakers, tape deck &: headphone plug in jack/I', \\'as left unclaimed. Brand ne\v in box & gunranteed. Originally pric- ed nt $219.95. Take over for S90 cash or 11mall payments. t . a ya w a y Department. 714/893--0501. BIG RU:i,f;\tAGE SALE May ll &. 12, 9:X>-5 pm . St. A n d re \V s Presbyterian Church, cornt>r 15th St & St. Andrews Rd. NB. Ai.VIPEX blank cassette tape• 90 min, (new). Sold, $29. per dozen. Accept $9 per doz. 534-1148. EXTENSION ladders \\'ooden, 12', 20', 28'. 1212 So, lb>sll St., Santa An a, MZ.3120. ELECTRIC Generator AC- DC 10 amp 3\S. HP almost ·nc v:, good for camping. $1.Zj, 531-7294. STAIR· GLIDE {elevator), cost $2000. Sell tor $950. On- ly used 3 mo. Pvt party, fi 73-7743. GATES-Chain link 8' hi It hardware S25 ea. Drafting tables 42" x 72" $25 eL Fluorescent llle!'!-2 tube in. •!ant start Sl8 ea. Coke machine $25. 833-1467. BEAUTIFUL 11ew Japanrse bullet 52" x 30" x 16", hand c.atVed black laquer, can 't use, paid $375 -tut sale SW. Call 642-6468 after 4 pm v.·eekd ays or anytime \\'eekendfJ. A Private pa rty must sell 3 Electric lype'Nflters, OOflt O\•er S600 each, will take $250 each, 2 Calcu1aton: cost over $600 ench, v.•iU lake S275 each. 8'12-5945 before 2. HOBBY TRAIN Lionel train. 4'x8' fully equip.. ped, Call after 6 p.m. Used only one time. 998-0470. ----POOL table, antique style, 4x8 1il.1tl'. $:125. Will deliver free. SJ6..1102. ll's in to be thin, ••• The Diet \\lorkshop "ray For infonnation 531-5105 NEW pair v."Omens bowling shoes, size 5, never #rn. $5. 638-2285, .. LARGE L-shaped lksk &. <'hair $85. Plu!h carpeting 650 sq ft $100. 541-3323. REDECORATING: Must sell all appliance!! &. furn. Xln't cond. 546-4G3'.J. Behind Tony's Bldi: Alat 'l Mu1lci1l ln1trument1 m J."ENDER. Buama.n amp. J35 r.m.s. 2-15" Alteca $300. Fender Coronadl>12 guitar, wammcy, $150. ~1904 . VOX Royal Guar dsman Amp., total sound e!fects at a reasonable price. 968-6291. * ACOUSTIC GUITAR * $40. * $1s.-0723 * 124 American tandem w/11idt 968-0i88 aft 5 pm rail & surge brak(":!:, Can be GER!ifAN Shepherd...$ ~old seen at D&na Po Int . blackmalf'-2 mo obec:IJE'llCe 714 • 496-40al day& I eves. train-OOJ..1910. 213 -691·2502. Asking ~. BEAUTIFUL L a b r ado r 28' C;\BIN C?'ui.ser, SJOOJ. female, 4 mos old. Good cash. Roomy family boot. '\\'Ith chlldttn. 6t2.Q364, Good !Wling record. 1'.1arlin 3 Kittem, 6 .,,.q old, chair. Ship to Shore w/full and 1 cat 8 mos. old. boat rovers. Hull by G. C. * CaU 892-1283 * Parsons, built locally. Good operating cond. R. P . FREE Kittens, 5 v.'L'eks otrt. Maskey owner. \Vk-day5 154()...8554. 294 E. 21st Street Cbsta Mela. fiTJ....GCm. 22' CuS'lom Sport 1'~isher. Office Furniture/ Equip. UNTIL the end ot the month I Peta and Sopplies I[~] we will chemically clean, oil '·mmmmmm.:·~-r,; A adjust any typewrilei;-or 1 calculator for $19.95. Elec- trics $24.50. Call 968-1797. VltF, Deplh r f!'eorder . Cht'm. head, outrlggen;, '.! fishing chairs, bail t1:1nki;, 400 mile ra~c. Also good ski boat. 646-ti.144. C•tt 852 JB:\1 Seleclr ie S275. IBi\I PERS~S and Himalaya ns l\1odel c Standard sz;5. Elec black~. slivers, cameos, adder $50. 64.Z-1.269. also Persian stud service. 1~· SEA Witch-4 new models Tiller, Sport, Fisherman, Diver, from $750. Motors & lrailf'r avail. 546·0060/ 546--05111. ~=~~~-~ --892-2970. l\fONROE Printi.n g FREE ki ttens. Also pure Calculator w/Memory, JUSt bred Siamese 5 \Vks old Bo•ts, Rtnt/Ch1rt'r 908 overhauled. Sell srJO. $20. 642-4818 , 5.14-3R85. . 675-6369. Dog1 154 l:IA VE BOAT-\VILL TRAVEL VICI'OR adding n1achine-- All Metal movement. Cost Sllg.,.ssD. ~. Pl1no1/0rg1ns 826 * PUBLIC NOTICEI Before you buy your piano or organ, be sure &: see us for Best Selection tor the be!lt service in Southern California At Lowest Discount Prices COAST MUSIC SERVICE Sport fishinr Cruising LABRADOR Re t r e i v e r , 64fr9000 644-a211 AKC. regi3. quality puppies. Boats, Sa il 909 Call 557~219 aft 3 pm. :Have 1----------shots. 30' YAWL "Nice" $2,500. 12' SREGOR German Sheph·...... Penguin w/trlr $500. 17' Cat 1:'IU & trJr $500~ ll' Lark $50, 20' Kennel has beautiful pups Viking "Sharp" $ l, 5 0 0 . by Oi. Nordic. Tentll!i. 546-49!!0 \lo'eek-day•. 527-1931. SHELTIE pups (toy co.I.l ies) 3 males, 10 wks, champ. quality. AKC, shots $75. 847-4909. CAP ('()D CAT Boal, 18', Marshall fbg. As nev.•, lull.o(.'()ver, on shore n1oor· bl&'. $-1800. fi75-2625. 1839 NewPOrt Bl at Harbor 1,'iViMileiiEileipihainitiDiimii•i·Ai·Linoi"illlli.Dimi'iie-iAi·Linoiiiiii&lH61iiii8iiiiii I Costa ~1esa 642-2851 11 Open SUndaya 12 to 5pm OBEDIENCE Class to start Wed May 24. in N.B. Irvine area. Open to all dog$ 5 mo'.!i &: older MG-4928 STEVE Wilson, Shore-goer sailing dinghy. New said, rudder, lee boa.rd, oar!. $125. 548-27M. ORAGON-29', 7 sails, full ' covers. Great slip, $2750. 675--3845. For 1n 1d in Woman's World Call Mary Beth 642-5'78, ext 330 New Knit Capes Busy-Day Deli9ht! 7388 .tq~'B...JU Top of( pants, skirts, llresses v.'ith !ltriped capes! Look fashion smart in cabled and fringed capes. Easy, u11e knitting \\'Or!ted. Pattern 7388: si7.es child',.; Z. 12, misses' 14·18 Included. Easy.to-follow direction. ' 6EVENTY·FIVE CENTS r each pattern -11.dd 25 nts fo r each pattern for Ir ~·J ail and Special llandl- : otherv.·ise third-clan livery \viii take three eeks or more. Send to ice Brooks the DAJL Y ILOT 105. Needlccni.11 pt., 'eox 163, Old Chel&ea atlon, Ne'v York. N.Y. ll. Print N.1me. Addrus, p, Pattern NumMr. 'EE D LEC RA FT '72~ 9406 I SIZfS 3""'6 ,,,, 1lf ,..i .... 11Tr..-r' ... Look and feel fresh, pretty from your morning cup ol c:offee 'Iii )"OU say good· nighL J usl 4 main par1s - v.·hip up scvE'l"al !kimntel'IJ in prints, solids. ORGAN • PIANO WAREHOUSE New-Used Famoua Brands STEIN\VAY, KIMBALL, CHICKERING, etc. (Over I.ID) pianos avail.) HAMMOND, KIMBAIL & CONN, etc., organs. Before you buy-Give us a by! Largest Dealer in the West PENNY OWSLEY CO. TI4/892-3314 U352 Beach Bl., S. of Katella Daily 10·9, Sat lo.6, Sun 12·6 B-3 HAMMOND. Perfect w/ string bus. $1,988, CONN Theater. $1,345 THOMAS full cons. $1,395 WURL player demo. $1,144 Nu pianos. No short cuts. $599 GOULD MUSIC CO. 2045 No, M&Jn, S.A. 547-0681 ** Since 1911 *PIANOS*ORGANS* Going OUt For BOsiness Best quality • prices • serv. Kawal·Stelnway.Baldwin, e:tc Player Pianos & Rolls Rental!! ••• \Ve Buy -Sell Daily 10.6 Eves/sun 12·5 FIELD'S PIANOS Costa Mesa (714) 645-3250 WOULD YOU BELIEVE FREE ORGAN LESSONS 83 long as yuu like! No reg. l!tration. No obligation, Just Come Mondays 7: 30 pm. COAST MUSIC 642-2851 TOP PRICES PAID FOR Steinways & Hammonds PENNY OWSLEY CO. 892-3314 OONATION Prl. pty. will give 50% to a church on $10,000 pipe organ. 645-1530. Everett studio $300, 5JG.8775 \VHITNEY Spinet designed by Kimball, maple, xlnt cond. Sl25. M5-3774. Sporting Goods 830 S URFBOARDS, pad· dleboards, slight freight damage. $55. 1911i Placentia, C.i\I. 548-3486. BROWNING Auto 12 gauge. ~fake Oller! 691 Victoria, C.l\f, TV, Redio, HiFI, Stereo 1972 ZENI'nt 136 RCA 2 Small Fox Tenier mix puppiefJ, $7 each. To good hon1e, 642-4818 or 534-3885 e\'es. e 4 Tiny Cockapoos. SW each. 642-4818 or 5,'W-3885 eves. * IRISH Setter Pups AKC, Chan1p Sire, superb litter, shov.•/pet. 963-6291. SILKY Terrier, very small. Silver blue. 531-2433 BLACK poodle puppi~. 10 \\'ks olrt. m ea. 642-4818 or 534-31!8;) aft 6. e PURE bred BOX ER puJ>I. Cute, healthy. S'-5 ea. 833-1950 days; 837-9670 eve. TINY Toy Poodles Apricot, AKC reg. $75. Registered PoodlE'IJ, $50. 547-3851. NOR\VEGIAN E lkhound pup- pies. Xlnt pedlgrtt, AKC, Crafdal bloodline 774-2134. THOROBRED fawn male PUG puppy, Have papers. 548-2714. GEFL'\1.AN Shephered-Male-7 mo. Reg. Paid S125-take best oHer. 548-6395. SAMOYED puppy, 5 v.·ks old. $20. 642-4818 or 534-3885 eves. IRISH Setter pups, American Field Reg . Male/female, shots. 673-0085. OOBER..\tAN pups, AKC, top qua lity. 962-2662 P U REBRED Dachshund puppiE"S, Sl5. 546-4167 SILKY Terrier pups, 4 malt'S, shots, AKC. Call a.Iler 4 pm. 838-1149. * PUREBRED Collie Pup- pies, 6 wks old. $30 each. Call s.15-7761. * THE CLIP JOINT, $4.50 &. up. Graduate groomen, Dwntwn Hntgn Sch 536-4466 Tiny cocki1poo1, $15 547·3851 Hor1t1 3 HORSES Appy Stallion 3 yrs, Reg. $400 firm, Ba.y Gelding $350. Buckskin gelding $200 or make offer. 540--3803 &ft 6 pm ----REGtS. Mustang, Annual hi:::hrooint trophy '''i!l!l{'r. Finei<t trail hon;e In Ornnge County. SHXKJ. ~1724. COLUMBIA 26 Mark 1l Deluxe. 968-7397 15' Radng !.loop with sails. Excel c:ond. $300. • 675-6349 KITE No. 299-New 11ail. Rae· ing rig. Dolly &: full covers - $550. 613-4335. FOR l!.aie 9' Trimaran. Near new. $200. • 671-2227 S I DNEY f/g sa bot. Complete. $250. 3 hp J ohll!IOn outboard. Good cond. $125. 644-2408. VENTURE Oo' ~5' w/furling jib, boom ~~ l: trailer. used 5 times, $800. Aft 6. & wknd!I. 675-0884. SAILBOAT 18' sloop, glass over \lo1Xld, cabin, o.b, sails. Side tie Terminal Island Marina. sns. 968-1275. Boots, Slips/Docks 910 \VANTED slip for 8 3 ' C"nJiser. Newport Harbor. 838--0272 day.Ii or eve11 BOAT slip! available. Choice slips in New Marina. (714 ) 673-6600. Boota, Speed & Ski 911 14' Nylox Speed boat. 30 hp Evinrudt>. Ne1v r o n n In co lights a nd trailer light!!, '72 rc>~islrn.tion, $450 or offer. 642-6829. 13~~· Ski &At, traller In good condition with 40 HP Scott that runs (as lsJ. $250. 531-7294. Cheetah Family Ski & Fish boat. Volvo Penta 130 I/O. l\fint rond. $2395. 962.-1120. ~"-·---_· __,l[i] C1mper•1 Salt/Rent 920 1969 Chev % ton truck·w/ 1970 Camper unit. 27,000 mi. Dual baltcrie!I, dual gas tanks -300l lb overloads, heavy duty radiator & trans· 750 x 16 spilt rim!I • Excel Cond. $4000. 548·8579. '65 Docl~%Ton.-N'ew mi>tor, good tires, 2 spare gas tanks. 8' camper, sleeps four, stove, ice box, 20 gal water tank. Plenty of storage. Sl950. 54()..5312. 8' nlumim.Jm Camper Sbcll. \\'indows & 2 drs·SlOO. '13-'829 Oran9tt . ~ty's Lar9.,,-Dealer \ In Costa Mesa 1966 HARBOR COSTA MESA Try the REST then come and See us! We can give you the Credit YOU NEED AND STILL SAVE YOU MONEY!! e HUGE SELECTION e WE NEED TRADES ALL T0''0T1\ e ACCESSORIES AVAILABLE 11ERE at LO\Y PRICES ANY AMOUNT e DOWN O.K. ON APPROVF.D CREDIT e 1972 DEMO Clearanl'e al greatly reduced prices TO\'OTA PICKU P e HALLEY PACKS ltollda mini trail-6Sce, E:x~I running oond. $7!1 or bfat offer. ~5368. \ llonda. nllni·trn\I 50. Runii ftOOC!, 84&·~36 .............. ,,_,. call QI f(A' b'te ttUmalel. GROTH CHEVROLET ' A.alt tor Sa.lea Manaa:er 11211 e .. ch Blvd. Motor Homes 940 Huntlnrton Beach --------147.g()87 Kl 9-J33I 1363L Harbor, Garden Gro\ie 1 Blk. So. ot G.C. Fr.''>'· 636-21\1 *Marvin Pearce* Motor Homes Sales • Rentals 558-3222 l 4U S. VHlnge \\111y, S.A. TEST DRIVE THE MIDAS MINI MOTOR HOME Distributed by Ken Craft Pmttucts CREVIER MOTORS 2QS \\', lst St., Santa. Ana 835-3171 HECREATIONAL Vehfclt>S for rent from $75 to $100 per v.'Ct'k, plus 7r prr rni!e, Sle('Jls 4 10 f(. Offl'r ~xplrt':<> June }, 1972. :'>lfi--02CJ I, 29!);; Brltsol, C.l\f, Trailers, Travel 945 _ .......... . e ARISTOCRAYS e NE\VPORTS e AUTO·MATES Also, sevt!ral u!led $395 & up WORSHAM TRAILER SALES 1709 W. 17th Street Sonia Ana (7141 531·2".>95 Trailers, Utility 947 \\IE buy &II mo.kes of cleM l~ r;porls cars. paid for or nol. Plen~ drive ln Jor free t1pprab1al. NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 ,\I, Co;\st lhvy,, Ne11·por1 Rr;ich 641·9405 Autos, Imported 970 ALFA ROMEO ------Alfa Romeo NO'V ON DISPLAY Snle!I . Service Part1 Body Shop COAST IMPORTS l()(ll}.1200 \\I. Coast lh•;y, Ne"''P'>rt Beach 642-0406 BMW IMMEDIATE DELIVERY & SEE US ABOUT Overseas Dellvery CREVIER MOTORS 208 W. 11111 St., Santa Ana 135-3171 GOOD 2 "''heel trailer -Visit our new hotne! AT PRE·PlfASE 2 PRICES dow air cooler.SwaniP<.'r 5.x8x2' deep. $100. Big \vin-& . lype $j0, 2217 An1cricnn • Cab Over Camp'rs ::-:: ~=~.~~:.>;::;. 949 ROY CARVER, Inc. ORDER YOURS TODAY (21 New gl'n'I dual 90 \\'hi Xl 4 E. 17th St. PERRIS VAILEY, '\\'llll tires. 900-15. C.O)(t Co.~tn i\lri;a 546-4444 6 PAC GALAXIE SIS.95 ea. Sac, both for $SO. CITROEN • CAMPER SHELLS P• 54!>-3790 """/wkndt or 542-3482 day!I. 4 diUerent varieties, F iberglas Perris Valley, fj Pac, Aztec. etc., etc. STARTING AT $179 with new truck purch11e e FINANCING PREFERRED RATES AVAILABLE e EXPERT CREDIT! '65 CORVETI'E 1uel in· jcction, complete, S 2 O O, Chevy bell housing-. 542-1734 ieves. *AUTO REPAIR * SAVE MONEY! Citroen Sports Mi11eri1ti Oran.11:c County headquarte:n ft'lr local &: European tlelivrry. Jim Slemon1 Imports zm So. J\1ain, Santa Ana 557-5242 Open Sun. SERVICE CALLS 6'G-e.!15 DATSUN 327 Vette engine, llolley, n. --------- heads, 41.000 m I J e s . BASEBALL &ell90n 1pecial. 893-0100. '69 "510" Datsun v.·gn. Lug· gage n ck. Very cleen. Xlnt "--"""" __ ,,,. ____ Jll {Al l ::~~00 or beat otter. COUNSELING AVAlLABLE 1-· PRI Party-19TI Datsun-JlO. ONE OF" OUR MANY 1·---------1 Auto/trans. MUS1' SELi~ Y.'AYS TO FINANCE Generit 950 THIS WE EK. Exet>l. Cond. BUY YOUR BRAND NEW '72 714-968-2666 ('\'{'S. '67 Cougar ~ 289. Auto/Sl095. '69 Datsun 2000. 5 spd, e<1n- '69 V\V bug · Auto. SU95. '65 vertJble. Both top~. I.nw Rambler Stick, $185. Call mileage. Beauty, 675--0Z12. aft 6 pm. 548-7482. '67 Dat~un 4 door t.edan. '58 Flet>twood Cad i I I a c , Good condition. $600. deluxe extras. All moving 546-44711 parts new. 50,000 orig.!"''°"~-=~~--­ niiles. Bei;t offer over $1000. '87 Datrnn 1600 lfrdlp, 1nag1, Robert, 494-5350, nu radials. Xlnt cond. Orr. (213) 59>-2152. Orange County's Fastest Growin9 Dealer • DON'T BUY Befort You SEE US VOLVO OUR ONLY IUSINESS COMPLnE SELICTION OF ALL '72 MODELS • GOOD SELECTION OF USED YOLYOS • BUY OR LEASE • '72 ' ALL MODELS ·IMMEDIATE DELIVERY Th• Brand Ntw Sport Wagon • 164 Models • Wagons • Sedans • EXPERT CREDIT EXAMPU: '72 Volvo $97 DOWN $97 Per Month Celica NOW! Super Values -at Dune Buggies f56 D.B. 70. 11-lanz type. XLNT COND. Many xtra.!i. Pri/ DEAN LEWIS ply. Best oiler. 673-ffi'2. 'fi7 Oat 4 dr. sedan. 1600 eng. S97 lS the total dawn pymt. New t r a n 11 / n e w clutch $97 hi the total n1onthly /clean In & 001 . $595. Tom pymt. l~cludlna tax A '72 54g..J6IO llr.. & f1nanc~ charge. on ---------n1>1>rovc:d credi t for 60 mos. New Cars in Stock EXAMPLE BRAND NEW '72 Toyota Sports, Race, Roda 959 AVENGER GT 80% Com. $2200 inves. Must Sac. Be1lt offer. 673-5522. Truck1 962 396 SS Camaro, rec. r blt. 4-spd, P/B, Nu mags & g11uget1 . Cu~!. Int. Im- maculate 893-6460. ~~7 1965 Dodge 1,; Ion Pick Up -NOT ONE -"'/camper shell, V-8, auto, Btrr MANY JN STOCK new lire~. Oean. $700, Cllll Jl\!:A1EDIATE DELIVERY 645·'16S3 6·8 p.m. COROLLA 1200 -LOADED 'SS FORD. P.U. -FRONT DISC BRAKES -Good rondition $.150 TINTE D \VI N DO\V 6 e &12-91 15 e -\VJtITE SIDE\\IALJ...S - DELUX \VllEEL COVERS Auto Leasing 964 -BACK·Ur LITES. (SEil. $95 DOWN PLUS TAX & LIC. $52 Mo. Try our tea.M-experu for Savlnga • Satisfaction • Ser- vice. WE LEASE ALL POPUI..AR 1972 MAKES AT CO:i1PE11· HILLMAN Df>fcrrf!(f pint. prlc~ i!I $',917 Including all finance ·1!-.2-Com--m-•_r _(_H_lll_m_•_"_l _V-an charges, 1axc5 &: '72 lie. or It )'OU pr"fer In PftY ca11h equipped with o v ~ r h <!ad full caJ1h prier i11 $4.133.45 1!ee.I rack, interior lined Incl. tax & '72 lie. Annual with shelve• economical to percentage rate 15.42~. run. Priced for q u I c k sale-1212 So. Ros!! St., Santa DEAN Ana. 542--3120. LEWIS JAGUAR ''BIU.. WflrTl ,JOG ES'' Sunset Moton OR.ANGE COUNTY LOCATION '70 JAGUAR '2 + 2 Automatic tr11ns, air CT1ndi· tioned, AM/F~1 radio, <>X· trrmely low milrage tonly 15.0001 . •'159 Clt'. Phone 645-6677 1970 fla rbor Hlvd. Costa 11-lrita KARMANN GHIA 1'H Harbot, C. M. M6·f30J • Y "'Y A ltnlctl .. Leasing Plan ham pie: 1972 VOLVO 88.74::. hel, knit, etc. f'l'ff rections. 50c E\V! ln11tant 1'tacr•rne. Printed Pattern~: JlriEW Women's Size! 34, 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46. Size 36 (bust 40) truces 1 5/8 yards 00.inch. SEVENTY·ffi'Z CENTS for each pattern • add 25 centa for each pattern for Air :\tail and Special Hane.II· ing; otherwise third.clan deltvef)' wUI tak.e three ~·eeks or more. Se:nd to ~larian 11-fartin, the DAILY PILOT, 442, Pattern Dept.. 232 WefJI tBth St., New York, N.Y. 1001L Print ~IE, ADDRESS vo I t h ZIP. SIZE and STYLE NUMBER. Televisions at clClf!e out prices. Some '73'• now i11 stock. U:iwest prices of the year. Priced be.low the dl.s- rounters, With 3 yr picture tube, 1 yr parts & } lT service. Antenna at cost H noo:led. Every available model tn stock a.nd on display. Hurry for full selection. ABC Color TV, Oran~ County'11 large~t Zenith-RCA Dealer, ~21 A Uanta, Huntln&ton Beach, 963-3329. BAY Ge:lding, xlnl Io r children, all tack \field. S275. Lynne \Vil.son 64Z-31U dys. 9jg....7149 e\•es. 1970 El Dorado Cam p~r. ll ~.', fully KJ\f contained. Like new. 811-~77 aft 4. Total Down Payment TIVE RATES. Cycles, Bikes, COMPLETE CASI! PRICE Ca.Ii Malc:olm Reid for 1969 Kann11nn (;hla $1200 Cal! 842-117l art 6 rm Alll radio, drsc brakes, au- to lra n5. J6 mo. :i oslc fancy knots, pat. I ' TM. $1. ally Arl nt Ralrpl hct • over 26 dc!ltgnii to ake. Sl. n11bnt Cr6rttet ~ - am by pictures! Patt~ms. mpk!le l n11bnt Olh &Mic '~ more than 100 ailts. -SI. plele Afa:han Book - SEE A10RE Sp r Ing F1L1htons and choose one pattern free from new Spring.Summer Catalog, All sizes! Only 50c. IN~'T ANT SE\VJNG BOOK sew today, wear tomorrow, $1. INSTANT FASHION BOOK -Hundmis of fuhkln facta. Sl. PAIR new speakers. Pri., ·ply. \Vh.arfdale, 15" woofer, S" ;nld .. 3~~" tv.Tettt. Box- e!I never open. Sold $350. Take S144 cash. Sli~U48. RCA 2S" Color 1V. Walnut comole-w/nN pie. tube. Ex· eel Cond. SUS or btst otter. 835-5.168. LA TE model RCA console It's a1~1 the right time lJ color TV $145. 2 0 0 always OMt r tatt pla~ U: Broadway, C.0.hl Mua. you w1.n1 RESULTS! Call U1td Color TV's llll lor Toda)''• U\'hll -&l2-56?1 le place that ad $125-$250 ••••••• , .. , 548-3493 be•utUul pa.ttetn.1. 50c. today! B~'D ne-w '121.rnlth Color I TV'•. s10 0vtr ~iloleaa1~. :•••······~·········~5'3"4~~-·~~~-~LE __ 1 For beat results! &tJ..Seil ' I ]~ Boats, Power 1957 22' °"'en11 Cabin Cnilte.r . No engine. Cle"n! Best oUrr. Call Hern1an, S48-5551 9 to S pm. 20' INBRD Boat & ott shore mooring. JJandles lO 30' boeL SlJXJ. 64~"'5. SKIP JACK 20' fib, Ur., SS ndio, outriggers. Loaded w/xt.ru. 968-3755. From '0Chrl11mu Neckties" to outgrovt'n V.-Vls -)'OU can turn "tn.sh to cash" In a DAILY PIJ..OT cla.ssificd ad ..., -•II fi42-56 J'8 \\'e'll help )'OU sell! f;.U.8:;73 Scooters 925 JS S21 75.~4. INCLUDES ALL further dctaiili. --------TAXES, 1972 LIC. FREIGllT, THEODORE '68 Bul Bandit Nu eng. Sport DEALER P REP. AND DF.l.r ROBINS FORD pist, Down pipt, Nu 'J'yre!ll IVERY ON APPROVl:O 200) H Bl\' nu paint, depend. Asking CREDIT. DEFERRED PAV · Costa Me arbor ~O $6.IJ:i. Tom 548-1610, MEh'T P RICE IS $272!i.G7. ~,o-..,.,,sa-~,..---',= anytjme. lNCLUDF..S AU. F INANCE Autos Wanted 968 'TI Penton 125-cc, Xlnl cond. Cl-IARGES, TAXES, l9T2 \\'E PAY 70r DOLL.AR $&:1(). l.IC., l'~REtCHT &: Dl..R. FOR TOP USF.D CAltS 5-18-9680 aft 5 P:\I PRJ.::P. f>'OR FORIT·F:ICllT If YQUr car is l'xlra j:Jen.n, i\111'\I bike for sale" • aood l\10S. THAT'S AU. ANNUAL i'.ec! us first. I 3 PRCNTG. RATE 12.fi4 rr. BAUER BUICK (()I'll'. • !i hp. $45. 64&-2169 W• Speak Your 2925 11arbor Blvd. SCllWtNN Vanity 10 &pttd• like new. WJth ear rack- S4i-~5l L1ngui19• Cmla .i\lesa 979.2500 Se Habla Espanol L\IPORTs WANTED Orange Countle:1 llONOA 150 in xlnt ((;I'll'.] DEAN LEWIS TOP ; DUYER sm. en:-881l~h ~!i_aTA * !>IS-2.ljl .. ~ TOYOTA H. Beach. P•. 841-3S51l '71 HONDA CB lSO WILL Buy "°"' car P'kl lor • Gn.2!62 * 6 4 6 9 3 0 8 or "°'· Call U.lph Gonion N'~ a "Pad"? Place a.n ltl! • 673-0900-445 E. Coast H•')'. Call 64l-567! Ncv.·port &tc:h. -------- MAZDA lmm.dl1te D•livery • Ln OUR EXPE~TS HANDLE YOUR OYElSEAS DELlYIRY UDUCI THE WOR~Y • HUNTINGTON BEACH Dean Lewis hi ,, • I. hi 17331 BEACH BLVD. HUNTINGTON BEACH .. " ' '.. . ~. ' 6 42. 6660 1!'1 a bfttUI •. sell your l!!'m1 •i lh ellse. use Dally Pll<lt CW:sUled. &n...lG'ii. Volvo 646-9308 I DAILY PILOT • ' . --SUPER SAVINGS 1969 Mere:. -1 .,., 1t1flo" w~, AT, F'W, Pi:, AMt'-M IWM, Rldl. '65 .lacJ-XKE 1969 Olds 1971 ·Capri C-S.·HTC:,... ·-.., ........... ~ ..... t.ottff •Ir -c-(Ol'ldltloril!lf ,,._.. ''"""" I .,..... trorM!llUlon, ,.-._ nldlO, rieti.t.. lend.,, tQp, ('216N4016001 • .,...,. r•ia. ,,,...,, ""~ • ""'""... • ... ii ti\. (»tntl10MU) Hltw, Ir# mil-. (llSOfl() w !MwW, w1r1 ......... OrM l(.ity ............... 1,.. $2999 $1499 $2299 I • DEMONSTRATOR 1 71 T-Blrd .. _ "'~'!-1~ ~-.. ~ •"""· 1......, rtcllo, llffllr, \flfllt-1 tlr... vlflrl lnt1rlot'. (ti<OIF- lllOS2) -·-1971 Gremlin \ ;\12 GRAND PRIX Cpe., IM4M. P/5, l11yl totJ, AM/FM uQ 4M1001n1 "" •tt•ll .. ,. K"'1 Ms ....... , ......... ,ff 11111 vtl, 1uto.. flctorY 1lr clllllll., PIWff 11-lng. DOWer lllllc tw"lk... rtd)O, """'· powff' wllldo~ ....tlllt Wll~ (YCN- MI> Kialty ......... llllhN tWI -~ ... $11dt 1lllff, ftdlo, hfftw, Cllt- IOm ln11rlor • r•ck. K .. !1 S ....... lt ... Mlmt 2 Or. Cp•. V8, outo., fa ctory air, P.S., P-di1c brakes , P-windows, AM.FM 1tar•o1 WSW, vinyl ro of, tilt wheel, etc. 12K5 7TA 125085 I Stk. 1034 $4926 95 '69 Chevrolet 1_,.1. Cuat•• H,T. (Pf, F11U pe:o-r, l•ctory •Ir, winy! fOO, (YDLO~l K .. ly ''°"'".. ll•l•Y µ1'S 71 B11ick 8ectN U.ttM C11tl. m. LO.ded, full powtr, lactory 1\r, '"\nyl roof, tllMI pwr. 1t11re1, /IM/FM 1/1rto, tic., CIC. CSIDDON I Klfly -"'ttfl!• •et1D MU• $1899 '56 Pontiac: Automllit, pO-r 1ttl!'lf19, or191n11 l ~ . .a,!IJO rnllH, Dir• wt .. r '"°''' (FXH· 77l) c •• ,. AU!Omllk, 1lr r.ondlllolllft!I, rldlO, rwi11..-, 1n1 tll•n J,ool mlles. (fS3ETXl Kel!1 1 ...... IM lt.uil n'1t IMMEDIATE DELIVERY $1899 $4399 NEW '72 GTO Cert.ii.. HT c,.. 1969 Olds Dotto II '6 7 Firebird CHMrftble Auloma.tk, P.S., 1lr tond., •f· dlo Mater. E•ttlltnt m1c:l1., n1ed1 .om• body Wllrk. (~ EOH) 2 Pintos loadod includin9 factory a ir con~ d;t;o,;"9· I 2D27T2ZI00004 I Stk. 72.26 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY V-t, 111110. rr•n,., liJttory •lr- Condillonl~, power •1Mrlng, pOw~r (dlic} brak11, rlldlo, huter, Yrlh!ttw•H 11..,, landa11 top. fWIA Mt! Ktily' SllfHll• •tt1H 117" $1499 '6 7 Thunderbird 4 .... Full pcwer, f1clory 1!r, vinyl top, •~cellffll (ondlllon. 174..._ CXW) 4 dr, H.T. Full POWWr, .. c. tory 11lr, ~S 1n11lne, v1nrl lop. ( Y RA"9 J Kiity Sllff"llll lttttll t111S $2399 '67 Pontiac: L. Ma• H. T. c,-. VI, IUllNl'letlt, r.c!lo, hllltr. power 1IMrl110, flcklry 1Jr, (UQJlll J Kelly S11tt11IM •11111 11"5 '70 Catalina 4 Dt'. h.trdll)f), P/S, P/8, Fie· ~ Air, Vl"yt top. 1:1:5?390CI02l02l l(t4ty S1199ftlld 1tM1ll fU4I Runabollf Ind 2 Ooor, 4 1Pftd •f'Wf 11111<1mtlk I YiJll•blr. E•· (J.47EZW) 1970 Pontiac: Sp011 Cpe., AT, P/S, l"/8, F"::tory Air, Bucker '-'-· (lllBZWI 1(1/ly SllHHlff ll1!1ll t•IS NEW '72 CATALINA $1399 $1199 $2299 2 DOOR H.T. P.S., P-d isc brakes, radio, WSW, factory a ir conditionin9, loaded. .I 2657R2Cl 16535 I Stk. 1175 1969 Ford Club Z Soot w-. .. V-t, 1uto. tr1ns., f1dory •It tondlrlonl~, 123\11" wlleollbtw, ("8218) Kilty S1.1t911tod •et11t 127M $2499 C•s•o• Sliyltri: H.T. CPI. v•. autor71111c, pe:ow1r stHt"ln{I, power br1k1s, l•t to'Y 1lr, vinyl lop, 1111 Wh"I, low m1111111. (YSHCll Kilty Svt111I.. Rlllil f~ · Spoclol Dir. WOIJOll V-t, •ulo. Irani., factory •lr condlllo!llnll, 1111 wheel. t\/FP 3761 • K1H1 S11tt11ftll 1111•11 um $1199 '68 Jeep 4-WHet Df!Yo Factory lnslllled P1rklllf Clo- set, Warrrn h11bt, Iron! POWlf' winch will! (lulch, re1r pe:ow- K lake off, rur dts1rt hitch, twin t1crorr 111nks, 1f(., t1C. M111t seot, {\/Glldt) IMMEDIATE DELIVERY DAVE ROSS Autos, Und 990 Autos, UNd SUPER DEALS '67 CADILLAC S•dan DtVille. F11ll power, 1lr conditionin9, IXWTl791 '65 ~~~~u6 (557 119) New Tire1. '64 DODGE 6 Pic\:up CN94779) Utility 1011 '64 ECONOLINE Pic\:up Utility 801 IN95l01l '67 ~~~~~. ;;, c.,; t0LR94l5) '63 DODGE SEO. V.t, Rad io. H;1ter, Auto. Tr1n1. l lZF2461 '66 ~~,o:.':~~;;, ~~~.v. N1w p1i11t, Top. ldlr,4l51 $1895 $995 $845 s345 $695 $495 '70 ~L~~~~T:. •. ~~.RPV., P.I., R, H. f PK4LOD20099Jl $1295 $795 $995 '68 BARRACUDA F11!b1c~. P.5., Auto. Tr1n1. !WTl 7051 '67 OPEL 4' 5pe•d. I 1 IODTXJ '67 CADILLAC S.d1n DeVill 1, Full powt t, lteth1r, air, Ltnd1Y. IOllAEICI '62 FORD VAN Econolin1, P~ncfecf, Ntw Ptlnt, l L455l71 • '64 CADILLAC CPE. FYll Pow1,, Air. IOPFJ171 '66 CADILLAC Std111 01Ville. Full Power, Alt, ISZH4il) '62 ~Mo':.~.!-,~ •. ;,.,., A fr Cond. ILVF5591 '64 ~l~~~URY (0Lk94JSJ '49 FORD STAKE (42MJFI $495 $2195 $1295 s795 $1245 $495 s425 $195 ,..._ .._. Tin WM .. Mer JI, 1t7J: ~ 1ltotou 1100 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA 64~ • -· Autos, lmport9CI 970 MERCEDES BENZ '70 Mercedes Benz 280SEL Beautiful t.-1ctaUic Blue with Ebony interior, Stereo and Full Power, 30 MORE SEDANS AND 9 SL MODELS TO CHOOSE FROM HOUSE OF IMPORTS Auth . Mercedes Dealer 6862 fi1Mchester, Buena Pk Along side the Santa Ana Freeway at Beach Blvd. 523-7250 Oran9e County's Largest Selection New & U~ed Mercedes Benz Jim Slem on s Imps. Wainer & Main St. --.... OVER 25 Clean, Reconditioned, & Guaranteed. PORSCHES 911's • 91l's . 914's 1957 to 1971 NEWPORT : IMPORTS I 3100 W. O:>ast Hwy. NeWJl)rt Beac" 642-9405 '10 Porsche 911 T 5 Spd, Mag \Vheels, Factory \Varraaty HOUSE OF IMPORTS TOYOTA '72 TOYOTA $2029 4 speed trans. DI:< AM radio. lleater, delrosten. tinted glass. \Vhile wall tires. Pop-out rear \vndows. Vinyl trim. Carpels. Front disc brakes. Reclining bucket seats. KE 20-300785. ADVERTISED PRICES EfftCTIVE THRU MAY 11TH 2480 Harbor Blvd. at Fair Drive COSTA MESA Ph. 546-8017 1 V2 MILE SOUTH OF THE SAN DIEGO FWY. OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 8:30 AM TO 10:00 PM SUN. II AM TO 9 PM --.... 970 Autos, Used 990 VOLKSWAGEN CADILLAC 1965 Bus 1600 en g i;:, --------- paneled, crpt'd, wide ovals. $12CKI. Call 6~5116 aft 6 pm. YOUR ONLY Autos, UMd Autos, UMcf 990 JEEPS ·55 Peep Wagoneer, ' WD. 6 cyl., Auti>-trans. Pwr. SIB. ·51 Chevy Stationwagtin Runs Best off.er. 673-5522, "'°" · ""'d' head .. ...,,. MUSTANG '6' VW STA WGN $950 CLEAN. GOOD CONDITION Priv, Pty. Call 962·3822 Good wkle oval t I r e s . FACTORY 675-134:> evL>s. $100. l.-67-i\1-u-,.-.,-.-F .. -tba-ck,-good-I AUTHORIZED 'j9 Chevy \Vagon. Good V-8 cond. Lo1v miles. Make of~ '66 V\V VAN. ne1v paint, 1500 CADILLAC engine, body, needs trans fer? 675-5402 alter 7:30 or C0.1 engine, Must sell. $40. &15-2768. anytime or wknds. l Leaving countcy. $895 Or DEALER f\ftftlll 1111:.i best cash otter, call be'twn 6 Largest selection of Cadil· COMET '66 f.IUSfANG 289. Immac. - W.f\. llMllD & 8. 536-25-il ask for Fred. lacs In Orange County. U:lw ml, pwr. steer., auto., TOYOTA Sales-Leasing. Look for our '62 Comet. Excellent con-air. $1,000. 61~. 1969 VW BUG needs a 11ew full page ads every W<'d. dition. Make offer! '69 Red Mustang _ Mach I. ·~ bo 9 home. Looks &: rum great. & Friday (or our spec:. ials. 681 Victoria, C.M. 1 /b ta dk Full = Har r, C.M. 646-303 37 000 I d' lll95 N bers C d II P '· P ' pe • '70 TOYOTA ' m ,;;~. " a a 1 ac: CONTINENTAL Price 11525· 8J3.lll92 aft 6· STATION WAGON 2600COHASTARBMOERSBAL., '65 M .. ustang V-8, Auto. Rm: '66 VW bug. One owner. Ex· CO o 1 Nc'v car trade in, 4 speed, ceptional cond. $750_ Call 540-9100 Open Sunday 1971 NT. 4 d.r ~an, a_lr. .r1g:rna owner. 54,000 ml. radio, & heater. 748BZU. 675-3543 aft 6 pm. "Bll.J.. \VHITLIDGES" full pov.·er, l\11chehns. 8500 c64=&.=234~8~·~-----I $1495 S mi, A?tf/Ffit stereo. Under f.1USfANG 'r.6 xint cond Auth. Mercedes Dealer '71 V\V BUS unset Motors warranty. Well under Blue PIS, R/H, $800. Prl Pty: 6862 l\1anchester, Buena Pk Santa Ana Toyota 18,000 miles. clean! ORANGE COUNTY Book. 642-4100. 644-1869. Along side the Santa An.1. Service dept. open 7:30 am $2600 * 546-3379 LOCATION CORY -~=,-.,-=~--1 Freeway at Beach Blvd. 'til 9 pm Monday thru Fri· '60 vw, new engine for Baja '70 Cadillac Cpe. tTTE ~;;~s~~t~ff~ S.:i •-" -~ t AL .~ l I II 523-nSO da)PHONE ~2512 Buggy, sand buggy. $2'.tl. A luxury car at a price you '66 Corvette fib, AM/FM. CaJI 968--0256 =======1'69 PORSCHE 911T, 536-7m. can aUord. Factory air. M-22 4 spd .. 411 JlO•L '69 PLYMOUTH l\-IB '68 230 sedan, auto, AM/FM, 5 spd, chrome 417 W. \Varner, Santa Ana '67 VW, very good condition, #ZZl..797. LBS, 427 CID, Ho 11 e y AM/FM. $42,000 miles. whls, radials, 41,000 mi. ~ Wlll • $800 Days 645--0844, eves &: $3995 Edlebrock, TRW, mags .. -67-P-lym_o_u_lh_Fttry __ m.4. Great shape! $2995. 545-3774. !;~94-~ce, 535-28n 8 to 5 •• t,1'\$ weekends, 544--0779. PHONE 645-6677 Will take best offer this dr., P.S., P.B., Air COll- '67 4 Dr. sed. $200>. Firm. m'*" fS •n POP TOP Camper, red, 1970 HARBOR BLVD, \veek. Ron, G45-5686. ditioning. Like new. Priv. 200 Serles. white, au1o. '70 Porsche 911T .,. AM/FM, tent, xlnt cond. COSTA MESA DODGE party, $1100, 545--0041 alt~ 46,600 orig mi. 642-3407 Stereo, Mags, Pri1111.te Party, Toyota • J Deal 842-'004 pm MGB '71 MGB-GT Bahama yel!O\v "·/black trim, l\1ag \Vheels, Alli/FM Radio, Consider Ttnrle. HOUSE OF IMPORTS • aguar er · "BILL WlUTLIOGES" . . Days 839-9560, alt 5 -Authorized SaJes A: Sen.rice 1962 vw Bus-axx> mi on Su-_., Moton '1i6 Charger-383 eng.1·.~66~Red--V-al_ta_n_t-ve_ry_good_ 83.1-3155. 900 S. Coast Hjghway rebuilt ~~p-eng. Shag ••~r M i chelin tirerautof~1ag running cond.,' nu tire-. 1956 PORSCHE compl~ Laguna Beach 540-3100 crpt--$595. 640-0858, ORANGE COUNTY Wheels-bueket aeals-$9!15. brakes, clean $325. 64&-1338 restored. $2800. 1967 TOYOTA Corona, eng VOLVO LOCATION 812-9644. alt 3 67~3 needs rebuill, $400, See at '66 XKE Roadster $2795 '69 Polora wgn PIS, P /B/ ·PONTIAC 1964 Porsche • Excel Cond. 2322 Palisades, S . A • 1972 VOLVO Local one owner car with air, 383 eng, tlnted glass. Sunroof-Mech, sound, Make 979-1496. 25,000 adual miles. 4 speed, Rad/auto/$2200, Whiteside-1,•60_P_O_N"'TIA..,....C~·-Ca~tal-in_a_389_1 offer. 963·3580 aft fi p.m. '6'9 Toyota Sta \Vag . .l\1e.rk n. chrome :wire wls., and near 5.16-5261, vs, P.S., P.B., &d. bcley, Auth. Mercedes Dealer 1 -_, xln LeeM Tod1y 1t new radials. #RVK193. ,69 Polara P/S ...,;n• tires, -w -rutt~ 6862 M ch 1 B Pk au o, air conu., radio, t Phone 645-6677 wagon, , .,......... • .., d . "" .. .., "" an es er, uena RENAULT cond. SI?iOO. 5-18-8001. Best Rates P/B air Jmmac Owner smog ev1~. Runs xlnt. * SUBARU Al low as'l2,299. <No. $15) Along side the Santa Ana · $81.74 Ptr Mo. 1970 Harbor Blvd. $2,200. 5.16-7693 aft·2 pm. . $250 or ofr. 892-.2970, Freeway al Bench Blvd. Rena ult Sal11 & S.rvic; ·~ sTOpd~~~nOly •"'trallas.~agooln~ O.A.C. AM/FM, Auto. trans:, Costa Mesa '64 ~Co • 1969 Pontiac Grand Prix 51)..7250 disc brak 36 "BIIL \VlUTLIDCES" """"5 " rone.., model· one owner· 900) m· · ---------' ·ror over a decade in Orange kind. 6#-859-t. es. mo. Good shape, $495. 1 '63 MGB-All now parts-E"•· · County For Loatlnt or buyint • SJ1nlet Moton Call 67>-1973 .dt 6 pm. Full pwr • air. E><cd cond. lrans, tirts, e I e ctr i cal Serv. 'Dept. Open ti1 8 p.m. TRIUMPH fl l , ORANGE COUNTY Best offer. ~1. sy'1em, etc. Asking 1700 or Mor.day 8•11 ••Oil LOCATION COUGAR '68 GTO Big engine, v1eyj trade. 557-1332. Jim Siem<>"' R'"aull * TRIUMPHS * WA llAll,. '72 El D ado , top, factory air, factory '67 MGB Roadsler, good 2201 So. Main, Santa Ana VOLVO or 67 .Coupr. PoMr brakes. mag "'heels (with lock!} l blk. north of \Varner '71 CLOSEOUT Hardtop Cpe. Vinyl top, power steering, air. One 37,000 miles, Max·X. tirts. ~;!in~~ ~~c~ant St.. Service Department 546-4114 SPITFm.ES AS LO\V AS $2399 1966 Harbor, c.M. &tS-9303 Leather interior, AMIFM owner. 644-1667 eves. Beautiful cond. $1550 phone Sales Oepanment 557-5242 GT-6 SAVE $500 990 .tereo, tut It tele wheel, FORD 8'6-1256. '69 MGB, xlnt cond. 1971 RJ6 Redan wago", mini rarrz WARREN'S Autos, UMd Ecru!Ai!le control like new. 394· ,68 ""-bird n..ntiac, 350-•. I~ -~~~~ S C C ·~ ~ -throughOut, air, "'"'"'°!. part ar enter AMERICAN . '65 Ford Station Wagon, Radl•I" xtra cl••"· ad buy PEUGEOT Alll/FM stereo, mlcheli"· OR ANGE CO u NT y • s $8295 C"try Seda" 1415. S<s-2314 54;.2901, must set, $2750. or oUer, LARGEST · ' · PHONE 645--6677 dy, 833-3496 evts aft 6. -.-..,----=-PEUGEOT * '9:1-«l2!l. 110 E. h i, s.A. 547-m&i American Motors l!rlO HARBOR BLVD. '&! O>untry Sedon, 14ro. ''!~.~g~~..:'~. ~ VOLKSWAGEN l"'Gremllna_ l"'Hornolt CO!{fA MESA White "'th blue Interior. ss;o or best oUer. ~. l"'MAtldofi l"'J•vallnt '61 CADILLAC 54$.l'91 '61 Pontiac Bon oov 111 e F1ll'r. WARREN'S S Car C SABARU Plck•Up truck, •P' port ~ prox. 1400 miles, extra llrts. i97o VW Sedan 11450 71~1T10 Ii"':' a"'I ., ~ Factory air, !Ill It te!ellCOpe, '61 Buick Le Sabre. >.. ta. fm. Call 846-4930. H l"'~~~;~ .. ~"rra EL DORADO •.. $3100 '63 Ford Ga1.,.;,, Al ta 1150. c'on .. rtlble, needs .mt, 9· _ .. ,np .m11m ''"'"'" patl<Jed roor. ISO. 548-0878. T BIR_D ___ , e OMNGE C 0 U NT Y ' S ss:;o. 615-2625. LARGES!' c .. M,:;:al<o;...;,:.:Room.:;;=.."=Fo-r-D"'a""b.:. '66 VW Bus, new engi~. no E. 1st St., S.A. SC7-074C d Y , , , , c 1 ea n out the radial Urt1, Roni abocb. It's alwaya tht ria:IH Ume It garage .. your ~his CASH Xlnt cond. 64~. always !he r(aht place lf with a DAILY PILOT '69 VW Squareb•c\- yoo \\'ant RESULTS! Call _c.::1:;:'"=-1\ed:::..•:::d::.· -----.c..:X.::ln:::•:..· .::co:.:n<l.::·c.l:.:1.::350:.:·c.644.:..::..::Thlll:::: • Har American lull power, t<d leather upllol. '55 Wago" "'-Cam. Tlo.4 sp. -• • . • • • Home ot Convenient Pvt Pty, 67.S..1132 Rebuilt tng. Big htads. Alr l96.1 Ford T~Blm. Full ~. Payments 1960 Cadillac, 2 Dr. Rebutl! Shock. 64fp..3.3.2l. Al Cond. Only. hM 60, 1"9 Harbor Blvd. l!ngint, new tires $450. Call Turn unll9ed Items Urto quiet mt. Muat Set 10 ~ Co1t1 Mo11 '4U261 Bill~. cash, call 6-12-(.6111173-3 o..;...;.1_50_. _____ ..J .. l , I -I ' . ' I l • San· 't;lemente Ca istrano VOL 65, NO. 130, 3 SECTIONS, '4-4 PAGES * * * * * * Chinese · Charge Ships Attacked TOKYO (AP) -Two Chinese ships anchored in North Vietnamese waters were ''brazenly and repeatedly attacked'' by U.S. planes and warships <lver the weekend, Peking said in a broad cast ear- ly Wednesday. The broadcast, carrying a.statement by the Chinese Foreign Ministry, said some Chinese crew members and Vietnamese civilians aboard the ships were wounded and both ships were seriously damaged. It said the ships were anchored off Non Ngu Island, Nghe An Province .. The statement said the incident "constitutes a grave pro'"'.OCation against the Chinese people" and added: "The U.S. government must immediately stop its act of provocation of attacking Chinese merchant ships and prevent the recurrence of similar i n c i d en t s • Otherwise, it must bear full respon sibility for all the grave consequences arising therefrom." County Couple Shot to Deatlt, At Doorstep By TERRY COVILLE Of ... ~llY Pllef 119tf A Westminster couple were shot to death early this morning on the doorstep of their home, apparently as they rE:turn· ed from a night out. Police said Frank Marcus Schiavone, 41, and his wife, Shirley Rine Schiavone, 44, were both shot in the back as they stepped through the doorway of their home at 6202 Choctaw ·Drive. Their bodies were discovered by their ll·year..old son, Steven, who was asleep in his bedroom, but woke up when he heard the shots, police said. One neighbar said be heard the mufned shots about 2:20 a.m .. looked out his win· dow and saw a medium built, lightly clothed man running around the corner of the Schiavone home. Police investigators said they have no theory yet on why the double murder was committed, The murder weapon has not been found. Schiavone, a pressman for the Long Beach Independent Press-Telegram, was shot in the back while his wife was hit in the head and in the back, by an as yet unknown caliber of bullet, police said. The couple were apparently shot from outside, police explained, and their bodies were stretched across the open doorway when Steven f~ them. A neighbor, Peter Garland. described the Schiavones as "good people". He said they have a son, John, in Burbank, and another son, Richard, who was wounded two weeks ago in Vietnam. Another neighbor, Joe 1'-iaher, added: ''There's a numb shock when you hear something like this. The w h o 1 e neighborhood is worried." Police investigators ·spent the day searching the house and yard for the weapon or weapons and any other l!ligns of wha t .happened. The boy, Steven, atl<nds Finley Schoo! In the Westminster schoOI district. He telephoned police after discovering the bodies of bis parents. The Schiavone home is in a housing tract called "Indian Village" in northwest Westminster, near the San Diego Freeway. I GiftSomethirig To Sne eze Over San Juan C&plstrano Mayor James Thorpe was surprised to rind a bouquet or red geraniums on hl! desk when ~ entered the council chambers Monday. The new city noy,•er remained at the right of the mayor's no.se dur· ing the entrre meeting. Thanking !hf' p1rks and re<:rea· tlon member who supplltd thtm, Thorpe said. 1'1leauty may be In eyo of the bebokl<r, bol oomttlmes there are probtem1 aaised in the nose. ''Thls may have bten a wbe choico after all be<ause t&igbl I didn't have too ma1y problems." Thorpe ls alleralc to flowers. The Chinese news agency said three U.S. warships fired "many shells" on the two vessels the evening of ?.1ay 6. The following day around noon "many U.S. aircraft bombed and strafed'' the ships. The news agency added the ships were again attacked by "many" U.S. planes the afternoon or ~1ay 8. Jn Washington, a State Department spokesman said "we don't know anything about it." Soviet Summit Go-ahead Seen By Kissinger WASHINGTON (AP) -Dr. Henry A. Kissinger said today President Nixon realizes his latest Vietnam moves "will create short·term difficulties for Soviet leaders" but fully hopes to proceed with Moscow summit talks May 22. Kissinger, the Pr.esident's assistant for national security affairs, 1aid the United States received no indication from Moscow as to whether the So•ietl will want to proceed with the summit. He said "it will probably be a day or so" before formal reaction is received. While saying Nixon's attempt to block receipt of Soviet war supplies to North Vietn:.imese ports pre sents Moscow with difficulties, Kissinger said the Soviel.9 "permitted a situation that posed mas- sive difficulties for us." The presidential aide, who repeatedly restated an American willingness to resume public or private peace talks, told a news conference the Nixon ad- ministration "perhaps underestimated the massive influx of offensive weapons. Kissinger argued that the Soviet arms shipments tipped the military balance in Indochina in favor of Hanoi's forces. Responding to questions, Kissinger said the Nixon moves involve "some risk." He added: "The judgment was that it did not in- volve an unacceptable risk." But he conceded that only events will prove whether the presidential strategy will work. Kissinger said he wo\lld not expect the moves against Hanoi's shipping lanes to affect the battle in South Vietnam during the next three weeks. However, he said there should be a battlefield impact beyond that point. Kissinger said Nixon reached his decisions "with enormous pain and great reluctance.·~ Capo Residents Don't See Light On New Signals The installation of four downtown traf~ fie signals is making some ~n Juan Capistrano residents see red. ?.iembers of the city council noted Mon. day that they have been Oooded with calls about the traffic lights which many feel will destroy tbe beauty or the downtown '8rea. "The fact is, they're ugly," said Coun- cilman James Weathers. "Well, to quote an old engineering pr1r verb," quipped City Engineer Jack Kubola, "Everything is beautlful as long as it meets the specs." Tbe council directed Kubota to look Into alternative trafflc signal designs which have betn.-,peclally designed, like those in Old Town in San Diego. Kubota added that his office U!Ually looks only at the funclional upe<:ts or the traffic signal! and there i.s a trend in the state to be uniform in the interest ot safety. But be promised to check-out the Old Town ltgnals and report back to the council. 'l'be four 1igna1.s, whjcb already ""' bting INtalled, are at the comtn of Dtl Obispo and Camino Capistrano, Orttg1 Highway and Del Obispo, 0 r I t g a Highway and Camino Caplotrano. and <Xtqt illlbWaJ lllCI El Camino Real. ' I EDITION ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, MAY 9, 1972 BERKELEY PROTEST OF PRESIDENT NIXON'S BLOCKADE OF NORTH VIETNAM Police Ca r Burned During Demonstr ation by 1,000; Some Were Arrested Six Arrested at Berkeley Empty Police Car ·Burned in Antiwar Protest By 11se Associated Press Antiwar demonstrations e r u p t e d throughout California as students and others protested President N i x o n ' .s mining of North Vietnamese ports. 111ost demonstrations were peaceful but violence erupted in the city of Berkeley and the University of California campus there. In San Jose, police .said' two fires, ap- parently caused by incendiary devices, caused $200,000 damage early today at an Army reserve station and $1,000 damage to a Navy-Marine training center. At Berkeley,·six persons were arrested Monday night after about MIO antiwar demonstrators overturned and set fire to ~ em pty police car during a torchlight' arade and ripped down an eight·foot- gh chain·link ·rence around the former Peop le's Park," focll! or a 1969 universi· t disturbance. After destroying the fence, about 350 of the group headed back toward the cam· pus overturning mailboxes, telephone booths and new sstands and smashing windows along the way. At least 10 Jaw enforcement officers suffered minor injuries. police said. Officers used shotguns to fire ricochet Capo to Employ Firm For U.S. Park Grants By PAMELA HALL~N Of flle 0.111 Pu.t SI.if A special consultant will be hired to ap- ply for federal grants for new pa_rks in the city of San Juan Capistrano. The firm of Recreational Land Plan· ners of Placentia was chosen by the city council 1\-ionday for the job at a cost of $400. Voting against the proposal was Coun- cilman Edward Chermak who .said the entire parks program should be re- evaluated before any more funds are spent. "We cannot continue our program without a means to finance it,'' he as id. "The voters turned down a financing pr~ gram during the last election. Let's rehash this and see if we should scrap this program and come up with a dif· ferent kind ." Chermak added that he didn't believe the council should continue to spend money for parks because the city is get· ting deeper in debt in its parks budget. Councilman Josh Gammell disagreed saying the city may Jose the $400 it is spending to obtain a federal grant, but it may gain a considerable amount in return. Dennis Paqu in, chairman of the parks and recreation commission. said the government will require matc'hin~ funds (See CONSULTANT, Page Z) San Clemente Man Denies 'Speed' Charge; Trial Set The alleged manufacturer of large amounts of the illicit drug "speed" (methamphetamline) in a· posh San Clemente residence has pleaded innocent of the charges and will appear at a prelim inary he¥ing May 22. In the meantime, police have begun a search for a new suspect in the major case. The latest dispatches name a Laguna ~ach man wanted under a $50.000 warrant. George William Cox, 29, arrested early last week at his home at 4IIX> Calle Abril, in Harbor Estates, remains in custody under $50,000 bail to await h Is preliminary hearing later this month in South Orange County Municipal Court. · Cox was arrested by a dozen agents and a federal naroot!cs burea u Held chem.Isl Officers allege the man who holds 1 college degree In molecular biology was producing major quantities of tbe •!tong drug ill a sarage laboratol')' I outfitted with expensive ~ear. "The .street value of the monthly pro. duction, agents said, was about $28,000. \Vhile officers declined lo identifv the suspect still at large, the man is alleged to have had a major role in the distrlbu· lion or the new drug from a Laguna Beach· bou.se. . eo,, the father of an Infant, has listed his occupation as student and part.time house painter, Complaints agalnst him charge the manuracture of restricted, dangerous drugs and pOs.session or metham· phctnmine ingredients. It was those alleged raw materials. said officers, which led to the thr~ month lqvcstigatlon leadlng to the arrest. f"ederal agents watching drug s!'llp- ments became suspicious when they all gedty learned thol Coi a5'<rtcdly WH ordering large quantities of materials "'hlch are uwt to manufacture lhe illicit drug. " ' rounds of "silly putty" into the pavement1 which then bounced into protesters, sting• ing but not penetrating the nesh. Tear gas was used once to disperse a group, police said, In Santa Barbara, an estimated 1,500 persons marched from the student com· munity of lsla Vista, adjacent to UC San. ta Barbara, to U.S. 101, where they blocked traffic for more than three hours early today as a symbol of their op- position to the President's announcement of the mining. There were no arrests, police said. Sherifrs deputies rerouted traffic. After two hours, some or th e demonstrators marched to the university campus, smashing at least SO·windows in an industrial park in nearby G·oJeta, a. sheriff'! sergeant said. The demonstrators blocking t h e highway left about 3 a.m. At Stanford Univer!ity, some 200 students marched to the campus home of President Richard Lyman where they were met by five riot-geared sheriff's deputies. A spokesman was allowed to brin~ the group's charges of university complicity in the war to Lyman. He reportedly bad no comment. The street fighting in Berkeley con- tinued for two hours, with police cars - many with broken windows -charging knots of demonstrators. Police information officer Richard Berger said that at around I a.m. police began making arrests when it was clear some groups would not be broken up. Those arrested were booked for In- vestigation of rioting, malicious damage or resisting arrest, he said. Telegraph and Shattuck Avenues were littered With plate glass from shattered store windows. Trash containers of ail sizes were overturned and tlleir contents .set on fire , Fire trucks threaded their way among de monstrators and police cars to put out small blazes. By 1 a.m. police · were .managing to keep larger crowds from forming, but kept up running skirmishes with smaller groups. The Berkeley demonstrat lon began with a torchlight parade soon after Nixon addressed the nalion over r.adio ind television. Gold Skyrockets -Dollar Plunges LONDON (AP) -President Nixon's escalation of the Vietnam war sent the price of free gold 303ring in European bullk>n markets today whlle the U.S. dollar ·weakened on the foreign ex· chl'\nges. Uncertainty was widespread in most European stock markets as investors awaited developments. Tht dollar declined to a two-month low in Paris and wal!I weak In London, Frank· fun and Zurich. Gold wu fixed tn London at the record high or $5-l 1 fine ounce, up ll.50 Item Monday nlghl's close and nearly $2 above the 1$tO'l5 tiling Monday aft<fllOO!I. Today's Final N.V. Stocks TEN CENTS 60 Ve ss els , 350 Planes Take Part SAlGON (AP) -The biggest U.S. 8ir and naval task force ever assembled in Vietnam began mining the entrances to Haiphong and other North Vie"tnamese pons today and heavily bombarded railroads and highv.·ays in North Viet- na1n. The U.S. Command reported one North RELA TEO STORIES PAGE 4 ,TODAY Vietnamese ?.fIG jet shot down during the mining ope.ration, the seventh MIG reported downed in four days. The command said the initial phases of the blockade announced by President Nixon h1onday night "have been sue. cessfully accomplished'' and the Navy planes that dropped the delayed-action mines to seal off the enemy's harbors all returned safely to their carriers. But the commander of a cruiser4 destroyer notilla in the Tonkin Gulf, Rear Adm. Rembrandt C. Robinson, was killed fllonday night and hi! chief of staff and his operations officer were missing when their. belicofJlU-de.veloP<d engine-trouble and crashed u they were trying to land aboard the cruiser Providence. Robinson, 47, was tht first ldmlral ti die in tbl Vietnam war. The Navy A id it marshaled a fo rce of at least 60 shlpa -including five aircraft carriers tlth 350-400 warpl anes lour cruisers and 30 destroyers -to mine all entrances to North Vietnamese ports, to cut off the delivery of war materials through the territorial waters of North Vietnam. and to sever rail and other communication lines ashore. More ships were on the way, Including the carrier Saratoga from the Atlantic Fleet. She was expected within a week. The 7th Air Force has more than 500 strike planes nying from basei ia. Thailand and South Vietnam. U.S. Command .spokesmen said air strikes continued over North Vietnam to- day. They gave no details of the day'I operations but said attacks in the North nearly doubled during the past weelt to an average of about 200 .strikes a day. American plan" returned to the Hanoi area Monday for the first time in three weeks. Tbe aerial mining or Haiphong cen- tered on a narrow channel called the Canal Maritime whic h was dredged Into the harbor. It is about a mile long, about 500 yards wide and dredged to a depth or about 20 feet. Other ports on the target list included Hon Gai, Cam Pha, Quang Khe and Dong Hoi, The U.S. Command declined to disclose the type of mines used r but those available include acoustic ml n es detonated b)' the noise of a ship's pro- pe.llers as it passes nearby. magnttie nunes set off a ship's .steel hull disrupting the mine's magnetic field and contact mines which detonate when hit by a ship. The mining operation began at 9 a.m. Saigon time, just as Prealdent Nixon wu beginning his televised address. The President said nations shipping supplie1 to North Vetnam had been notified they have three "daylight periods" to get their ships out of North Vietnamese ports. The notification said the mines were set to (See MINES, Page I) O•a•f e Wea Cher Skies will be falr except for early morning low clouds. lllghs ahould range from &72 with the Iowa from 13-118. I NS IDE TODi\Y TM mining town of ldria will shut down ai the end of 1chool, its l20.11ear hi.1tory end ing in conctrn ovtr ecol09y and pollu- tion.. See StoryJ Page 12. L.M, .. .,.. • C11lltr ... 1e S Cl.111111• JI.,. Ctrtl Ct II Crts.,..,.. 11 0.•ltl Neltml ' lflttt\111 ,.... • flllffl•l-1 ,, 'lllt nct t•ll ,.,. tllt ••ctf'll t i...rtKtH ,. illllft Ltllftr1 11 Mwltl · 1t Mtlvti ,llllf1 It •a11ttot1 "'"'' • °''-c-1y ' S-b .... ,. lttdl Mtrfttt, lf.11 ·-" T11 .. 11r1 lt w"""' 4 w~n• Wtttl 11 Wt!Mfl'1 ,...,. 1).14 W#lf..._. • ,, f 0.C.11 .. Y PILOI SC New Land Projects Reviewed " San Clemente planning commissioners Wednesday l•:IJJ revie"' 11 list of new stafr • rtPorls on proposals to build .a major condominium complex on 21 acres of land which last Wetk formally becllme part of the city. The conunlssion $peCiflcaUy will study the half-dozen rouline restric1ioM then transmit the action to councl!men ,~:ho \\•ill act on the zone change request next week. E. \V. Rathbun of San Leandro. \Vho has v.•orktd for about a year to bring his property into !he city, needs zoning before he can launch hill condominium project on ,!he acreage surrounding Grant's Plaza shopping center in the Palisades. Besides city approval of the zoning, RlJlhbun also will need approval of use permil.s and tract maps for the project because ii falls under ne\I' provisions co vering conditi onal zoning. That concept was approved in the form of a new ordinance last week and gives the power at the time or zone changes to set strict conditions for approval of new land-use libels. Other items c<lnfronting commissioners Wedn esday include: -A request by City Councilman Tom O'Keefe for permission to build a single- family residence on recently ann exed land along Camino Capistrano. The land, zoned unclassified, was part or an an- nexation of severaJ small parcels ac- complished early last month. O'Keefe's Jot is at 35531 Camino Capistrano. -T1vo encroachment varia nces ar .. fecting the 10-foot front setback on sCparate city properties. Carl Babcock e:eeks permission to ex-tend both noors o[ bis building a few feet into the &etback area at 104 Corona Lane. Carlos Garcia seeks an approval of a six-foot fence in his setback area at 1632 Las Bolas. The rules say he can only go 42 inches high . -Final consideration of the latest edi- tion of the city's five-year capital im· provements program. Canine Aids Drug Arrest ' 2 Pi.rates K:illed Israeli Troops End Hijacking TEL AVIV (AP) -Israeli army troops today killed l\l'O Arab .hijnckers , captured two others and relea~ed 97 persvns on a Belgian je1lin<'r the tqrrorists threatened to blow up. The passengers escaJ>('d minutes after tv.·o men climbed onto the \1.'ing ot the plane and forced the emergency doors open, "It is all over now." said an army spokesman, 21 hours ll fl<'r the plane land· ed at Tel Aviv International Airport. Both of the dead guerrill as were men wearing wigs as disguises. The captured hljackers were women, one of whom was shot in the chest and seriously wounded . capt. Reginald Levy, the pilot, climbed out of the bullet-scarred jetl iner 'filh bis hands covered in blood. Bpt he smiled and appare ntly was not injured. "'n1anks very much. It's a lovely day,'' he told Defense Minister Moshe Dayan, who was standing beside the plane with Chief ot Staff Lt. Gen. Da vid Elazar and tour generals. Officers said 18 Israeli soldiers dressed in white Sabena overalls burst through the doors of the plane and opened fire on the guerrillas. "Lie down ! Lie down ! Everything is all right," the soldiers ye lled to passengers as they fired at the hijackers. One bullet hit the terrorist leader between the <'yes. He identified himself as Capt. ,~afat. The two bodies were laid on the plane's wing. Their blood v.·as splashed all ove r the passenger section. The released passengers laughed. smiled and kissed each other, then climbed into buses to be taken to the airport building. Shoub of joy rang through Knesset - the Israeli parliament -when Premier Golda Meir and the government received word that the troops had taken the plane. The hijsckers took control of the Sa- bena aircraft Monday after a stop in Vienna on · a Oight from Brussels to Tel Aviv. When it landed at Tel Aviv they ;)Q1 pue aue1d <Jq1 dn MOIQ 01 paudJ'e<JJl.{1 87 passengers and 10 crewmen aboard upnless the Israeli government released Arab guerrillas. Perez spent a sleepless night at the 1. airport ns representative of the Jnterna. UonaJ ltt.'<I Cross tried to negoliate. Figurea on the number of guerrillas the hijackers wanted released ranged from JOO to 300. They wanted them put on tho plane and nown to Cairo. Today, the Israeli state radio reported the government re]ected the demands. The state radio said IsraeU negoliators offered the four hijac kers safe passage to another country if they re.leased the passengers and cre1v. Bomb Blast Links ·Probed In La Habra By JACK BROBACK OI 1111 Dilly l"li.t Siii! Police Chief Lee Rivera of La Habra said today there are persistent rumors that the bo mbing Monday which critically injured a volunteer Boys Club· worker of that city may have been ronnected with recent motorcycle gang wars in th& coun- ty. HONOREO FOR SERVICE L!. Mo! Portntr Lt.· Mel Portner, 20-year Officer, Honored hy City San Clemente police Lt. Mel Portner has-been honored by ~e city for 20 years's service as a full-time officer. Lt. Portner, a long time resident or San Clemente, is the longest-serving sworn officer on-the U-man force in San But the chief added , "We ha ve no solid evidence ~o go on as yet and we can't gi ve too much credence to rumors." C~emente. Rona ld Beaulieu, the victim was Portner, who in recent years has served honored by the Boys Cl ub of La Habra as as traffic chairman for the Fiest La "volunteer of the year" in 1971. Christianita, js a past president of the He was the vi ctirey of a bombing early Orange County Peace Officer's Associa· Monday morning when a mercury-trig-tion, a three-year past president of the gered pipe bomb on his car exploded. San Clemente Peace Officer's Association Beaulieu lost his right hand in the ei:-and a leader in the junior rifle club ac- plosion and the arm was amputate4 just tivitles in Ole cJty. below the elbow during four hours of The lieutenant started on the force as a surgery at La Habra Community reserve officer in 1949 when he was Hospital. His liver, spleen end lungs were employed at the Chilton Lumber Com· punctured by shrapnel from the box. pany, then soon afterwards moved into Chief Rivera said today that the U.S. full-time work. . . Treasury Department's agents and the He and his family live at 129 San Orange County sheriff's department Dimas. bomb squad are aiding La Habra police in the investig ation. A treasury agent said the bomb was CI y } not similar to the one whkh last month emente OUt IS critically lnjured Wayne D. Timms, a 'J:l- Year's Delay Carr Attempts To Clear Grant San Clemente City Manager Kenn eth Carr will fl y to Sacramento Wtdneaday in a final attempt to seek approval for a long-standing grant application to help pay ror an expensive sewage collector termed. critical to the city's growth. The appUca1lon for a grant front the FederaJ Department of Housing and Urban Developmen t (HUD) and ad- ministered by lhe State of California1 has remained in limbo fQr more than a year. San Clemente ha~sought funOs for the proj('{'t estimated at abou t $800,000 to constr uct the ne\I' mai n line nearly the entir~ lengt h of the city. As proposed, th..: major collector \VOUld follow El Camino Real fro m the south ci· ty lim its to the new reclamation plant off A venida Fico. Carr won city council approval for the trip last l\'eek and told councilmen he hoped to finally determ ine the city's chances. Tbe proposal \Vas rated high on a priority li~t last year after resting,in lhe lo1v-priorily areas tor ;nany months be.for<'. One reason fqr the increase in priority. city aides theorized, was the need for th_e li ne to serve San Onofre Bluffs State Park. City officials have said that unless the tie\v line were built. San Clemente could Charles Pearson, Coimty Leader, Succumbs at 73 Charles A. Pearson, 73, ,a member of the Local Agency Fonnation Commission and a director of the Metropolita n Water District, died Monday after a brief illness. Pe arson was known to thousands as ''Mr. Anaheim." He was a city coun- cilman for 25 years from 1935 to 1960 and mayor of the city for the last l~ years of his terms in office. Pearson also was a founding member of the Anaheim Planning Commission in 1927 and was on the fi rst board of the Metropolitan Water District and the first organization commission of the Local Agency group. • not acrept the state's requtst for clty sanltatton services to the huge, master· planned state park proposed in northern San Diego County. San Clemente is the main hope to p~ vide water and sanltatlon services to the six P111es of beach and 2.800 inland acfe.!'t receptly acquired by the Slate Depart· ment of Parks and Recreation under a 50- year lease from the Marine. Corps. The new 1nain line \Vou1<1 take the 1oad off the city's only existing collector which runs the length of San Clemente along the shoreline. That vintage pipe operating at peak capacity can accept very little in· the way or nev.· loads. Development in the southerly area or the city ba$ been stalled Jn recent yearS'. because of the dJminishing capacity o( the collector. , If the ne\v one \Vere installed in El Camino Real. l'Xtensive resurfacing of the maln thoroughfare would accompany the job. From Pagel MINES .•• activate automatically at 3 a.m. PDT Thursday. President Nguyen Van Thieu welcomed the U.S. mining <lf North Vietnamese ports and predicted that South Viet- namese forces will w:apture some ter- ritory Jost to enemy forces in the cw-rent offensive. Jn a speech on national radio and televisioq tonight, Thieu -called President Nixon's announcement "a strong declalon to show Ute detennination of the United States to help the South Vietnamese peo- ple fight conununism." He said Hanoi's decision thus far has created 650,000 civilian refugees and 2S,OOO civilian casualties. Thieu aaid South Vietnamese forces had been forced to abandon territory· in Quang Tri. Kontum and Binh Dinh prov- inces because of heavy enemy press ure, But he added : "We will retake some territory in the coming days. SAN DIEGO (AP) -Ronald Bruce Furman has been sentenced to four 1---months in_ jait-1or_ possession of -mari- The hi jackers w<'re armed \Vith guns. grenades and explosives. Levy. a1!01vcd lo leave the plane once !or negotiations. told ne\\•smen he was cerU.in the gunmen would carry out their threat "unless they get what they want." Dayan and f ransport Minjster Shimon year--old leader in the Seekers cycle club. h E That bomb ing occurred when Timms Win Wit ssays started his pickup truck in the early morning hours. . How v th ·d .. i _ _ S!_x students from. two San Clemente rulin e er, e ~gent~sai •--:-We re not elementary schools have been named He founded and was owner of Anaheim Truck and Transfer company. He was also past president of the CaJifomia League or Cities and of the Associated Chambers of Commerce of Orange Coun- ty. "\Ve will recapture Quang Trl1 the city that ll'e lost because of the mistakes of some . leaders or under hard pressure from the enemy." Pair tQ Attend San Franeisco PT A Conference • juana for sale. _ . Furman, 25. pleaded guilty to the charge after his arrest Jan. 13 while at- tempting to board a United Air Llnes plane bound for Portland, Ore. A trained dog sniffed out 103 pounds of marijuana in Furm'an's 's uit c ases, narcotics officers said. The arrest of Furman, a Navy veteran, was the first at Lindbergh Field involving use of a dog trained to detect marijuana. From Pagel CONSULTANTS . for every dollar it provides. But he added that this can ,probably be aatlsfied Jf the land the city owns as park land equals the value of the grant given . Paquin also asked the council to con- sider two changes in the parks and rec reation element of the general plan. The first is to eliminate a requlrernent that 20 percent of all park funds colJected be placed in a recreation center fund. The second is lo defer payment to the general fund from the park fund for all disbursements made for parks for the next 10 years. payi ng back this money at that time with in terest. Two park fund s districts in the city (there are four altogether ) have surplus fund s which cannot be spent in any other park districts. Tu·o others have large deficits amounting to nearly $100,000. Laguna Chief ' . Says He'll Run- For Observance Laguna Beach police Chief Joseph Kelly plans to run a few miles himself tonight when a relay team from the Los Angeles Police Department p a s s e s through town on its wa y to Canada. Chief Kelly, an avid jogger, says he did not run his usual two miles . this morning to save his en.ergy for the midnight run. One member of the 12-man team will be doing his JO mile Jap when the en- tourage passes through the Art Colony at about 11:40 p.m. Local officials have planned a reception for the non.running· team members. complete with red carpet and refreshments, on El Pasco. The law officers are making the 2,000- mile run lrom Mexico to Canada in com- memoration of Mexi can. America n and Canadian policemen who have been kJlled in the line of duty. The team left Tijuana this morning and fs expected to arrive in Vancouver, B.C., on May 19 during National Police Week. In addition to Chief Kelly, members of the Laguna Beach High SchooJ track team and other loc;il joggers are ex- pected to accompany the relay team men1ber through town g out a ~ss1ble connection between wirmers in an annual essay contest the two bombings." h · Evidence from th L H b 1 . spon~red by , the l°':~I c apter of the e a a ra exp osion American Legion Auxiliary. has been sent . to . the Treasury Depart-Wirmers or the top three places from ment l~borator1es 1n Washington, D.C. for Concordia School are Tina Anderson analysis. . ' The two bomb· 1 11 • ..1 fi rst: Nancy Day, second, and Tracy . . . ing.s o owcu a con-Noonan, third. flnu1ng battle 1nvolv1ng two motorcycle The winners from Our Lady of Fatima gangs, the Seekers and the Han~men. School are Rebecca Woolery first· Kelly Last Fe b. 20, a barrage of rifle at an · d R, '1 Anaheim service station wounded the ~n Tullius, secon , and oma 1' eyer, former president of the Seekers and two th!~. , others including a 13-year-old El T Miss Wool_ery s. ent ry, cont e ~ t boy oro spokesmen said, will be the local entry 1n JUst one week later, Terry Powell, 24. a the distric t competition of the annual member of lhe Hangmen was killed by contest. .. two shotgun blasts a he. rod hi The theme or the compebtJon was torcycle on the Fairv~w Stree~ of:ra';;.~ "What the Natio~a.1 Anthen1 Means." The of the Garden Grove Freeway. sponsor was Auxiliary t23. The next incident took place J\.tarch 3 when gunmen poured 19 shots into the home of Dennis Decker, 25, in Santa Ana. At the time police said Decker was a member of the Hangmen. He was wound- ed, but has recovered. Another killing occurrf!d March 10 when Robert C. Imbler. 27. of Anaheim, J'as killed by a shotgun bl ast fired into ,(the back of his panel truck. A member of the Hangmen J::roup has been arrested in connection \v ith the case. PRESS CLASS SIGNUPS SET Signups have started f-0r a series of plant tours and "how-to'' sessions for area club president! and press chairmen interested in having their club news published in the DAILY PILOT. For information ()n how to make a reservation for your club officers , see the bo1 published in the women's section to· day. It's on Page 14. In 1958 Pearson wai named "Min of the Year" by the Orange County Pres• Club. In 1962 Anaheim City Park on Harbor Boulevard at ·Lemon Street was renamed in his honor as Charles A. Pearson Park. Pearson is survived by his widow, Sara Faye, of the family home, 685 N. Helena St.. Anaheim and a son. James. Funeral arrangements are pending. Freeway Crash Claims Driver Paula Rose Miller, 25, or 9320 Bird Cir- cle, Westminster, lost her life early today whe n 'her eastbound car went out of con- trol on the San Diego Freeway jus't east of Seal Beach Boulevard. California Highway Patrol officers aaid the car went off the roadway, swerved back across six lanes of the freeway and smashed into the center divider. The Orange County Coroner's Office said she suffered fatal head injuries. With Mrs. M'ller's death, the traffic toll f()r 1972 ro () 92 which compares to 72 at this dat la year. Two San Clemente high school students will fly to San Francisco tolay for a three-day convention of the California PTA. They are two o: only three student delegates selected from throughout the county. Chuck Rahl and Mike Chemotti , both active in the high school's Parent- Teacher·Studen t Association (PTSA J, will attend several discussions and seminars at the annual event. Their attendance is sponsored by the local chapter of the associa tion, The conventi on, •tresses leadership training. Astronaut Thomas Stafford will be among th& prominent guests at the even I. Ad ults plaMing to represent the local area PTA groups at the convent.ion in- clude Jamie \Vestberg of Concordla PTA : Jo Arons, Las Palmas ; Kathy Walfield of Richard Henry Dana : Patay Sutton of Marco Fonter, Charlene Wert of the Capistrano United Council; Clara Cllnkln· beard of Ole Hanson and MJckey Valen- tine of Palisades. · The requests made by Paquin will be considered by the council at another meeting. "Maybe we'U even get f\.tiss Laguna to try and lasso him (the single runn<'r) \Vith a lei." Kelly said or the reception plans. Farmers Picket County Of fices Mor e than SO pickets marched in fron t of lhe Orange Coun ty Farm Bureau of- fices tod ay in a nationw ide protest by Cesar Chavez's United Farm ~Vorkers Union. SERVICE o o o OU.NOi COAST DAILY PILOT "rl't• Or1t19t C111t DAILY 'lLtlT, wltl'I wl'tl<f'I I• combjnt'd 1111 Htw1°Prt••• I• pUblli.htll .bY ~ Otl"91 Co11t Publlslllttg Ctmh~y. Sth· r1t1 t'dlllorll 1r1 Wllll,11"9, Molllf•r 111ro11911 Frid1y, lor COi!• Mt1•, foltWf!Ort llt1d1, i.luntln;ron lltt cll/1'1>1<1111111 Vt lltr. L1ou111 8M('.fl, ltYltltlSNl!ltlltck l .... '.$;111 Cltll'l..-!ff $t11 Ju1n Ct11i1•r•~o. A Si11QI" ttO•fnll editlol'I h OVblh ht'd S.i11rOty~ I nd Sund~y1, TM prln(!p&I p11Dli111111; PltM 11 I t )llO Wt1l ••r Slrtfl, (01!• Mt1•, Ctli!Otl'li•. •1•1 .. Jlob1rt N. W11d P111!111~I tl'ld f>11Dl.1htr J1clr JI, C11rl1y Vk c l'rnklt nl l l'ld Ctntr•I Mf~M •, Tho11111 KttYil Eollor Thol!'ltl A. Murpllin1 Mt~lllftV EGi!or Ch1rl•1 H.--t.fot RJch11J '· Nttl Al~ill.tl'll M.tnlllftV Ed11ors S.. Cl• .. 11ts Off~ 30S Nort~ lf Ctrni110 ltttl, t2•72 OtWO- C'Otf• Mrw:-J)o "'" ''' S!•tt! Ntwpert l11cfl : )JU ""'°rt t1111t .. 1ro t-ill!'lll11910n lffdl: 11'1S l11t11 l our1 .. 11d U,-8ffctt: 22J FOtlll AYfl'tt.lt ,., ..... 17141 •4'"4111 c1-1tw A"-tl .. •42·S•tl Sn c ....... ~· 1., ..... : T•..,.... 4tJ ... 4H Clwr•lfhl, lfTI; OtlWIH CHU ,.llbllll'llnf Ctrt'l11tnr. Mo "''" •letlft 1!1ut1rtotn1, M!torlt• 1nttttr OI' «lwrlllOINfl" '""Ill 'Ml' bl 1.-wtd wlthowf VKlli .,, mll•ltll .. (.,... ... , """"· .__, ( .... _, ... ,..., .. COii• ~ C.~ IUMcfl,,...,. W Ctnltf' t:tM ""°""'"" h ..,.Tl a.1• rnor1ffrllf1 mllltt,y ..,,..,... a.u nien11t1'1'. Abandoned Auto Ripped .by Bomb Orange County sheriff's officers are to- day investiga ting an explosion that destroyed an abandoned car in the San Juan Capistrano area, Officers believe the device went off during the v.·ec~cnd :ind den10Hshed the vehicle which had been 'Parked off the Ortega Highw;iy about ni ne miles frotri Snn Juan . lnvestl~ators s;iid it appeared as lf the bomb had been planted in the front sent of the car by persons who ma y have been cxpcrimtnting with explosives. Officers are today trying to trace the A spokesman for the local pickets who are marching at 1916 \V. Chapman Ave .. Orange, sai d their protest 3gainst the farm bureaus was because "Its leaders are illegally using their organiza tion to crush the aspiratjons of America's migrant farm \\'Orkers." He added, ''The farm bureau is a strike-breaker because it organizes com- pany unions, it is racist in its policies and breaks the law by using tax exempt money to attack the workers' union!' The picket sald the one day protest was being carried out at more than JOO fa rm bureau offices in 34 states. Poor Folks Get registered owner of the old auto. -Fried C/iicken Antique Arms Taken From Niguel Home Antique weapo ns valued at nearly 12.500 by the owner were stolen Monday by burglars who broke Into a Laguna Niguel homt, Oranse County iheriff'• of. ficers said. Deputl•s -.Id Intruder• at th• home ot Timothy Petrick Kahn. i.ms L a Hermosa took a SpaniSh crest nord deted about JfjO, a i\W.vlnlage cavalry Hber and Ml Ja-e Samurai "'°liU;' Kahn told deputi,. be was 1b,.nt from his home at tho 'time or th• thell. lie values the rare "'ea.pons(} $2,375. ATLANTA (UPI) -A fried chicken finn , picketed by workers for more job security and better worldna condiUons, has agreed to fry all the chicken It has for the poor people in Atlanta as a afgn of good will. The Rev. llosea Willia.ms, presidhnt of the O.Kalb County Southern Christian Lcad•rshlp Coolcrenc•, aald Monday th1t tho !inn, Church's Fried Chtcken, agtted to close Jis stores unUI the labor c!l!pute la ,.!tied. Tbe firm cave away more than 20,000 pieces ol Irle<! chicken on Sunday, and lh• OCLC agtted to end its picketing. - How Much Is It Worth? In tho carpet business sometimes iii worth EVERYTHING! Hardly a day 9oes by that we don 't get a call regarding 1nothtr company's poor installation. Occasionally tho damago resulting from poorly sewn seams or taped seams is not repairabfe. Thon the value of the investment looks pale indeed! Why pay $300.00 or $1500.00 for car,,.ting and gamble with tho installation? We maintain ell of our own crows, all !ought tho ONLY way to in· staD cerpetin11-tho ~IGHT woy! Tho grutost mojority of our liusiness is rofor11t There is 1 reaaon! .. ' ALDEN'S C:ARPETS e DRAPES 1663 l'loc•ntio Ave. COSTA MISA · 646-4138 • I • • • • " < • ~ 0 ' • ' ' ' " ~ ' ' e " ' • e For The ' Dissolutions Of Marriage Death Notlres ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCLIFF MORTUARY 427 E. 11th St.. Costl' l\ltsa llM!ll • BALTZ BERGERON FUN.~RAL HOME Corona del Mar 673-9450 Co111 l\fesa &46-U!f • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Bro&dway, Cosla Me11 LJ 8-3433 • McCOR~DCK LAGUNA BEACB MORTUARY 1715 Laguna Canyon Rd. 491-9111 • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery ft1ortuary Cbapel 3500 Pacific View Drive Newport Bearh, Callfornll l«-2700 • PEEK FAMILY COLO~lAL FUNERAL ROME 7801 Bolsa Ave. Westmlnslt r 1!3-3525 • SMITHS' MORTUARY !27 Main St. .. Huntington Beacll 13~!539 N"4 • ••if••ltr 1 MtryM Mt, ll•t .... , ••• ·-114 """" "' ... hlfl' ky t1"4• • il'f. Tew'll fh1t1 peh •f ell klluh -'"'tll.it 11 ••r cln1if!.l1 MCt1111. (And if 11ou ins i.t:t on on aardvfJrlc , you'll find one In the DAlt.Y PILOT'• Sunday comle stctiun in Bonier'• Ark .) Coast Districts Earn U.S. Funds SACRAMENTO Six Orange Co11.st school districts are scheduled to receive federal funds totaling 5616,398 for !he improvement of !heir vocational e d u cat i o n pro- grams. \Y ilso n Rile s. s tate Sllperintendent of public in- struction. said the 1noney comes from lhe National Vocational Education Act of 1968. School districts are being notified for !heir allotments to allow !or advanced planning. The Coast Community College District is scheduled to receive -the major share of lhe local grant with a disbursen1ent of $.133,7Gt. Cory Thompson, assistant chancellor of business affairs, said about 10 Rercent ·of it "·ould be used to improve pro- grams for student s with im- paired hearing at Golden West Col!ege in Huntington Beach. About 75 percent would be used for the siJpport of ex- isting vocational·technical pro- grams at both Orange Coast and G<Jlden West colleges, "'hile 15 percent would go to programs for t he disad· vantaged, also on bolh cam· puses. Next in line is the Hun· tington Beach Union High School D is t r Jc !. recei\'ing $136.976 . Other local school districts scheduled lo recei ve allot· ments are Lai::una Beach Unified School District, $8 .226: Newport-Mesa Unified School District. $78,480: Saddleback Community College District, $36,599. and Ca P i st r a no· Unified School D i st r i ct, 122.356. Officials in each of these school systems ind icated their funds would be appl ied toward new equipment purchases, n1ainte nance of current voca- tional programs, development of ne11• courses, or a com- bination of lhese areas. Barb~r Sane, • Will Face Arson Rap 4 Police, Pair Sued Tutsdq, M.1y ~. 1972 St.ate Ttu Apportiontnent County Receive s $21 Million Bv W 00180 SACRAri.1Et\'TO -ri.1 n re lain \1al1ey. $291.000: Hun· Costa r<ifesa, 1.19,DOO ; Foun-d than S'lt million has h<•n hngton B"ch. 18 ! ! , 0 0 0 : Ja in Vall•y. ll!.000: Hun· returned to Orange Cnunty Irvine, Sl26.000: La g u n a lington Beach, $44 ,000 ; Irvine, SA.f\ITA A.~A -A "'<lman ,_ 1 . 11 ind seven cilies from ll'le Btach..i.$93.000. $4 ,000. "'1tt1 r aims she was unla"·fu y State In recent ApJX!rlionments Also. Ne"·port Be a c h , Anrt'-£a.guna Bea c:h, $6,000; f\'icted from her home by her of ,·arious stale taxes. $338 .000: San Ct t me n t e, Newport Beach , $24.000: Sin estranged husband And hi.5 ~ Cl t "ooo •· J The largest lun1p of $9.8 $113.000. and Sa n Juan emen e, ...... : ..,...n ua n "'Oman companion after the c · 1 S2 ooo pair called NewJXlrl Beach million "'as dislribut~ to the Cfpislfano. $35 000. '•ii"iiPii"iiiiraiiniioii.iiiiii. iiii.iiiiiiiiiiiiOiii pol ice lo the premises '''ants c<iunty as a reimbursrment to An a p po r I on m e n t of I' mort than SJ mill ion from the local ,Rovrrnmtnt for the $750 hif,!h11'ay u.~tr tnxes i:a ve LOVE 1$ couple and four Ne"•port of·\ honitowne rs' pro1~rt"' tax ex· Oranj.l,l' County SL5 ltil.!llion. firers. J 'f fn1pt ion established by the Tht sr\'en ritles rrrt i\'ed lhc NOT filrs. Shir!e·-' 1.. \Va1 son. 907 l · 1--1 · ,111:11 • • • J' kll:IS" l1rr in """· folloll·ing: Sandcastle Drive .• C'\airned in The C'ou nt y will di\'1dr thr FORGEnlNG her Orange Count y Superior rrinlbursrmrnl amonlr': !he Coslil 1\-lrsa, SM.000: roun· Court aclion that .she was citi<.'s . srhools and othe r taxing lain \'allPI', Sfl2.000. Hun· I MOTHER unla"·full y rjectrd fr(lm the bod its. In <11l , thr st air handt'd l i n~lon fJr~rh, S I~ 3 , 0 0 0 ; home last Aug. 5 dtspite court nut $231 ntillion in the prop· lr\'111<', $2.1.000. orders in her favor. er!y ta ;r. exf'nlplion rehn-And Laguna Bf'a<"h, $1 7,1100 ; "''.scuffle at the Sandcastle bursernenl. Lo!! Angel es Coun-'San C'lrntf'n!r, $21 ,000: San SANTA ANA -Barber J · 17 000 hornr . ~1rs. \\.'atson Sllid, ty ret'civtd $50.3 rnil11nn. 111.111 { np1~\rano. . Ricky Star has been found ended .)Yith her in Newport About $7.4 million "'its C1i.:n1 Ptl e t a,.11. rollPrl1nn sane in an Orange County Beach C'ily jail on assault and returned lo Orani;it County a.s rrturntd $27.000 lo the l'-<lunl\' Superior Court jury verdict lrespassing charges and her its share of the sta1e-coll erttd and lhr fnllo"·in~ ::imounls IO lhat 1vill send lhe hairculler to ll·year-old dau~hter booked "in lieu·• vehicle \icrn~r frrs Orange Coast ('Llie~: I trial on arson charges. into Ju\'enile ll a!J on trespass-a C' cu rn u I a I e <I bet11·N'n ----·-- Judge Lloyd BI an Pied in,q allrgal io ns. December, 197!, and l\1art·h. · ordtred Star, 38, of Gardert ~1rs. \\latson said 1111 the 1972. Grove, lo face trial l\1ay 15. charges have ~n riismisscd Thal f"XCilie tax t;i.ke s tlir The barber, "'ho is still in municip;il court. Sht ~ddtd place of local properly ta1 nn locked in a longst;inding dis-thal she has no1v regained mntor vehicles. Except for 11d- pute "'ith state officials 11,ho possession of the home. minis tralil't C1lst s, the mon ry regard his constant undercut-She seeks damages o f is returned lo the local ting of minimum hair cut $t ,681.000 frorn the City of govf'rnmenl , which may ulie prices as illegal. is accused of Newport Beach on alle~ations the funds for g r n er 11 I selling a blaze lhat gutted an of false arrest, false im· pu rposes. Oislribulion is basrd Orange cocktail lounge last prisonmenl and assault and on population. a HAJllOJI CINTIJI llot "•rlltr Ctnlt r C•ota Mto•. C•lllernft Ph. 171 41 t7t-J)S·J Jan. 7, battery. She seeks an almost Local cities receivrd !ht 1111 1 ..... k~un• u. WISTCLIFF rLAZA NfWPOJITIJI INN TAKE THE NEWS QUIZ The alloca tions were made by the state Board of Educa- tion during its March 12 meeting. Distributions a re based on a district's student population and an equalizalion factor that tak.es into account relative district wealth and the previous comm ittment to vocational education. He is being held in Orange identical sum from he r following an1ouril.s of ••in lieu " .,n.11t1rn, C••. •niH M ,1 County Jail with b:iil set at eslranged husband. Sirnron E. funds. '••••'•'•·•'•'•"•'•"•'•''•'•'•'••II $50 .CMXI. Wat son, and Elmina Price. Costa 1>1esa, $480 .000: Fnun-•• ___ _ We Dare You ... Every Saturday 1 ,-~~~~~~~~..:.:::::__::....:..:::__::....:..::::_::_~_::.=::__::.=:....:_::::.:.:.::__:_:_::::__:=====--==-=-~~~-"..=============~ LEADS HEART UNIT Veterin1ri1n Sattler Fullerton Man Heads Heart Unit SA N TA ANA Dr. Fredrick P. Sattler of Fu'llerton has been elected preside nt of the Orange Coun- t_v Heart Association. Outgoing prfsidcnt is Dr. Floyd L. Wergeland of South Laguna. Presi dent-elect is h-1 rs. \\1illiam Zschoche of Orange. a regi stered nurse. This is the first lime In the county Heart Associ11tion's history that a woman has been elected to the presidency. r.trs. Zschoche is supervising nurse at Orange County Med ical Center and organized the H e a rt Association's Coronary • Care Unit Com- mittee in 1965. Dr . Sattler, a veterinarian, established a center teaching the use of electronic medical eq uipment for the association in 1965. Cal State Curbs Dogs On Campus FULLERTON -Dogs will no lf'lnger be able to frolic unattended on the Cal State Fullerton campus under a stepped-up enforcement of "leash laws '1 by President L. Donald Shields. Under his recent order, dogs must be secure to a leash or chain if brought on campus and cannot be tethered unat- tended . They can be. confined to au tomobiles and when brought f'lnto the school grounds they must ha ve valid licenses. ''The health and safety ha zards associaled w I t h unrestra ined dogs ha ve in· crea std during the past year,'' Shields said. Lobbyist _,'I ., To Discuss 4 " Education · SANTA ANA -Current state legislative a t t I tu d es toward education will be the topic of an address of Dr. Patricia ! S. Ji ewilt. legislative ad voca te, at the Oran11:e Coun- ty Personnel and Guidance Association dinner scheduled for 6::'!0 p.111. Thursday at San- ta Ana College. Dr. Hewitt serves as lob- byist for the Ca I i f o r n i a Personnel and c; u id a n c e Association, Ca Jj f or n i a As soc iation or School psychologists, Ca I if or n i a School Nurses Association and California Speech Therapists Association . Nationally Dr. Hewitt represents the National Asso ci ation of School Psycholoi::ists. Informalion rega rding the reception and dinner reserva. tio ns may be obtained from Dr. Da vid Jordan. Santa Ana College, telephone 547-9561. Dog Shots .~ Availa.ble Baby vaccinations costing S2 will be 11vai lable at clinics in 2.1 Orange C n u n t y com· munities between May 10 and June 8. Local Jaws require that every every dog belween four mo~ths of age or older be vac- cinated against rabies and licensed. The clinics will be open from 7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. at the dales and locations listed below : Costa P..lesa -Orange Cou n- ty Fa irgrounds, 88 fair Drive, May 17. Founta in Valley -17737 Bushard St., June 8. Irvine -University Park Shopping Cenler. Culver Drive and 1-lichelson, June 7. Seal Beach -Seal Beach Fire Department. Eighth and Central Avenue. May 23. San Clemente 0 1 d Firehouse. 104 A v e n id a ri.1iramar, ~lay 10. Lafi(una Niguel -Crown V a 11 e y Elementary School. 29292 Crown Vall(Y Parkway, June 6. Mission Vie jo -La Paz Plaza . La Paz and Chrisanta. May 25. San Juan Capistrano -San Juan School. El Camino Real and Spring Street. ri.1ay 30. Tustin -Mar~~_! __ Baii~t Parking Lot. 650 El e amir\o Real. June 1. Lei$ure \Vorld l..aguna Hillii -Cortese Stables . El Toro Road and Moulton Parkway, 1'.1ay 2.1. CUSTOM TAJtOIS ' SHl•TMAlt(•S IN OtAN(;[ COUNT't' PIJIMANINT IHOWJIOOM ~,-.-.. -,,-,,.,-,,-,.,-.-.-.~.. SPRING SALi 2 SUITS $135 DOUlll KNIT l'l(lll HIU lt9, llOW D"•I• r~ll .. , . I'' tJt l ltl• M•~.Jr ••• .. II tJ c .. ~ ............. •• •• 1~ .. ~,u~ . , •.... IJ t1 111~ w..t .. , •••• I) It '~"'' ........... 10 • •'"' .. .i.,. • t;,., root''"''' 11,1,ornt WOOllNJ l tOlllll llllfl SAVI UP TO S~ ·~ ~ .. , lt119t9' ""'•• ....... l~!•o, 1-1-, 11 •• -.. Skliti. • wr rit ANT 111r • ANT snu co'4n •Pill ALtl•ATIONI • IAIT ,ATMINTI I!!!!!!!!! ~ ·~·· -~ 10-1 IADDlllACIK INN W.. I ht,''"'",.,.,. P~• tu.JJ11 { t • We suggest you treat your teleph one directory just mark the page$ with paper clips. Best of all, tip the that way. corners with colored tape. That way you'll easily find the nu mbers you use Underscore individual listings with red pencil or regularl y. draw through them wit h a li ght yellow crayon. Then Here are two tip s: your numbers will jump right out at you. Identify the pages on which your regular numbers Don't worry about defacing your phone book. We'll are listed. Do this by folding down the top comers. Or, see that you get a fresh new one every year. - , l'ij""~i~j"' GEOERALTELEPHOOE It's no~the same old line. , • • \ • DAILY PILOT SC TutsdlY M1:7 't, 1972 OVER THE COUNTER Wigs Flipped WASHINGTON ACCOUNTS PROTECTED TO s10,000.00 Accounts protected up to maximum of $10 000 00 bylltRIFT CUARANTY CORPORATION of California only as provided m th• C.liforma Financial Code ON $10,000 90-DAY FULL PAID l'HRIFT CERTIFICATES .....,.. ,.,. .. mot1Ull1 A copy of Chapter 8 (Guaranty of Thrift Accounts) of DIVJSIOn 7 of the California F1nanc1al Code may be obtained upon re quest THRIFT GUARANTY CORPORATION OF CALI FORNIA IS NOT AN INSTRUMENTAL ITY OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA. ! WASHINGTON. Thrift & Loan Firm, OK Exchange Of Sh ares NASO l11t1n91 for Mond1y, M1y I 1972 Member of the $600 MILLION M•1d1 Rot1ry Engi ne MUTUAL FUNDS rArrhJc F•mlly COSTA MESA 270 [.11t 17th St 92627 645-3153 Offkes 7htoUll'lout C.fitomT• JBJE ~I $Joel IJ The For 1nformat1on on the stock or Toyo T ogyo Co 160-1.65 Apr 19 72 Call Roy Bartholomew Great Pac1r1c SecuntLe1 17291 Irvine Blvd Tustin 714 -832-8000 We are pleased to announce that our New Office 1n Newport Beach will open in July. Watch for ann ouncement of the opening date "" To be located In Suite 730, AVCO F1nanc1al Center 620 Newport Center Dnve Bateman Eichler. Hill Richards ~CORPCl'\AfED M1mbtlt1 ,..,,. Yo • !i"'I• c•P P•e ! ~ Coa1t & M d-#111 S ocli fJC~l/l{let FOR INFORMATION PHONE (714) 640 1'60 MANUFACTURING AND OXEROXING ,, 5 ' "',,..."• t 0 ' -/!::'<'. 0 ANSWERING SERVICE ODESK SPACE O LA. LINES ~EEOS 0 SECRETARIAL SERVICE 0 BOOKKEEPING 0 TELEGRAMS, TWX. DO~UMENT TRANSMISSION 0 MIMEOGRAPHING 0 MAILING LISTS COMM UN ICATIONS SEIVICE BUREA U "CO.Wllff CO....,M(Af ..... Ill TOW COMM..,... fAVINE·AfllPOllT INDUSTRIAL COMPLEX (7141 547.7777 (21i) •10.';Jt) ' COMPLETE-NEW YORK STOCK LIST ' \al• Nff CIMll ) Mltlll LIW Clell (lit • I • ~: ~~ " •• •• •• "' "" ~: =:, ~~I •• S" " " N •• ·~ N .. • ~! N N• •• "' N' "" N' ~: N" •• "' NC' •01 No No "' N• N• N .. "" ... ·~· a~ "" NON ~~ NO ~:i ·~ t~~ ""' ••• ""' Nw,t Nw11 ~"' •• NWM Nw1I No NorS N ' "" Otk I .,. .. ""' O«• OccPI OccPI "" ""' °"' "". O" Oh PW ,, ... °' '" OllnC Om• Ontkl Qpl k "' " 0 1• E Oulbo ()tit fl overT 0•~ Owen oxr a! P•cC.1 PllC l P11cPe "' P~C P PtC~'* Pc TA. PC T& P• ' p~ Ill Pit n~ P • m p~~ • Prn" p '" Pnpe c ' .. p • " H p p~"" Pl nnr " Penn PennP p ' p " PL ~f Pr .,,.., ' " ' ..... ' .. c p "' ' P< " p P< Po • ... ' " " Pf lt " "• '" " "' ... " " "' Ph El Pl'I Su "' '" "" Phi! 1>S '" . Pf\ !P~1 Ph VII p ... .... Pl ktlf p ""Gil p ,,.,..,. p '~°' p ,, p" p tllbV PIMl"" ~011ro "K N NEW """ E11dl1 ... ... 1 qR1 2 ll-'" 3 • • V' ' " 6 C1m , Jti•ll • m ' t••f " . 11 rvr 12 Coak 1l Mfl l~ Met \} AWe 16 NoS " ""' ll Oii E 1t Hom .. M !l "" "" 23 l((P 2• Winn 2J 0• HIW KttW $10Cll I .... (- '"" l • AM T.t ·-· I t= M:;:. Tut<d.ty, M" t, 19n SC Tuesday's Closing Prices-Complete Nt>w York Stock Exchange Li st rw a Mining Results In Selling Wave NEW YORK (AP}--The stock market respond ed to 1etnam w~r news today by selling off In 111 o \V3VCS Of decl1n1ng pr1res Volume was heavy in the early hours but qu.teled do\vn 1n the afternoon Declines. held a wide lead over advancel all through the session though the lead settled down to around 6 to l in the late trading N11 A¥ J 7d N11 ta11 t.S Hl(llPf t •, N&ICl)ll .40 ~:f~: N110is11/ N NllFv.1 1 14 Nill Gtll J~ NII GYD l Ul u1cu;11" 'OJ j=~~l·~1~~ ,, •• , M<I .. s ~ l • N.i t.. 10 N!IJnEI !Id H1lom1t 15 Nftltlln<'! 4 Ntv Pw 1 30 Ne-wOerY 50 ~~:~~ ~~ N1wtwo I lO Nwmnt 1 tM Nwmnof '-. NYHan O d NYSEG 1 OJ NYsE11t I ao NYSEpf ]>.. N r;iMo 1 ~ N1Mpl ~«I "/•MPI 'I~ N 111 Sh t'<I NL lndUil I NLT(p 1$11 No !o kW~ s No tnC t!o Norr 11 I 04 "',~, J!! ~~~,,~Jf'1 NOA IU: I tel N~All Pl 410 NAll~PI 1 ll Noell UI t• a::fjn!Gl tQ o,0Gi I 12 ' H• I" NlnPS ~ ~~~;~ff ~~~a !U Nori 1111 E NOflll~ 1 Nlllrppf 1 ll NwslAJr1 • ~ .. ,, ' wtl 11 25d Wlf Jfld Wl wt! In pt Nwt!IPI • 20 NwstlnpfC 5 NwMuT 1$d Nw~I $1 2 20 Nor nCD l No Sm J~k ~vi l! \ff Oak nd ' OallttPr 10 OcalPt Ull OcCl<IPI pf • OCCPIPI l .0 OC:ePIPf l 16 OodtnCP .0 OtdnP I 1 17 0110Ed l!U Ofl E pf •AO Ot!E,, •56 ()r!P.,.pf ''° Ok tGE 1 71 Ok eNG l t4 OlnCOl'll • Omak .it OntldtL 10 <>iii k1 M l Or RCkl 1 'JG OltECo2 Ol/lborcf M 1 OuftC U Ovr Tr11 '° Owl'rlCF 11 Owrn1 I 1 .cl O•lrd P'MI .0 P•c(';•• 1 n p,.( Lie 1.61 PacPr rl olO PflcPw l oM Pre Pw 11 p.,c~wil " r Pt T,_T 120 Pc T&.Tpf' P~e Tin 60a P~ 11e Wf~I\ p,. n~P l lO p ,, m 1111 '' p~~ Am Sul Prn Am WA p ~d 1!11 P~a. c ~ p " • ll P ~"tn "° P• Hn TO• p ... c.~ .. P nn Cenr Plll"" I CM Pe _.~ Old Ptnn F 11 1 P.nnPL 1 .0 P Lpf 860 P Plpf l lO PL llf •SO Ptlf.W 110 p pf 160 Pc l 80 p 1 lJ p~ 0 \10 p s l I~ I'~ Co 1 p Elm Pei nc lO Pc nc pl P cpl IO Pt I 2~ Pf eSr •0 Pt l'(n t l• Per e IS6d Pl %11 60n PhepO 2 10 Ph!nE 1 6t Ph Epf I \ Phl!:I pf 7 IS Ph Ellll ..-Plll!:t pf • ]0 PllE Of 3IO "I Sllb 1 20 PlllDM 124 PllMoplt Pll ll>$n 16 Ph i ndP1 1 Plll!Ptl 1 lO PnnvnH "° P dtwk In P eciNG 1 ?l P lfl;D'fl~( P onGa~ 17 Plf'ltVB 68 P ltFOIQ iO Pl fslon .00 P Ill RH C., Pll VllV O&b p~,..... 11 Po t od 32 PorlK IKl l\e"' l'ork Sales Volume If U11I~ '"'• lnttr11lllt111\ ;V~tlr "'° ""' "l' llolal lt t e 00) W9 r-• -"""' l'I' 11,,, .,, 19 dllt "° \) "7t '°° 11 ot •• ,... .. ,. tft,(11 1tlt ,. llJalll IJom Jones .. ·~ ~ • Mi 9'1 10 ~\'J ., I I\• I 21 1 . ... 111 ,,,. ) , 2l 12 'I 1 h Mil 12-to 1$•1•'• •• 21. ~. n n 1 • l<I • l • tt\o9 o 7 l'• 1'1 l 1011 2• s 111 J•• 11 •on • • 0 l'Oo 1Vl o ,, ' ' . 11 19)1 1111 JS I o 1 • t( J 1 I to 3J• :»Ir> x22 11 lN 1 13~ ll\11 l Pl• 1~ . ' . .., lt l"' l'A 1l 10 lf\, 12 ·~~ ~-,, 1 • 7 ~ 1~ 13. 1 1•14 1•. ,, ,, ,, 151 '3• 6C~ ' 1''4 l( 1.ss 1:r'< iu, '° llllo 17 ,.,~~9l 1 6-"t •lo 1 •• ''• 110 ,, • ,,. .. "' ' " ,. ' "' , .. • " .. " 'I " " " ·~ ,, l n; lr t Joi • 2!1 ,~. " . 14 1 • :n • 17'~ n " 37 '9 • J0!1 lS•• 11 • :n; • . " 1s. u•, 10 1 10 " 3 , 1SIJ ?S'o 1 ~. 13'.o ' ' t\l 2 ~ 20lo 111• l~ J"> l Jll 3'11 3I ,l: l~ 4 i11o is. 21 5 .... YO 10"' 10 o • " " • ' ~ " ' " .. " " 'l ' "' I I I I 11 • 11 ll 12 • ' " ,. " ' lS 1~ ! lh; ' "" " " 2J l 'o J l•o " m ' " 12• ?II 1 S 11"-•I 10 i . " ,,. 11~ ' ' ' n' " " 15' nv. " .. 110 91\'I ' "'' n " Jiil <11111 2 12 • 111 13 1 M ,.~ ' 1511) 15 1.s;, ' ' 3 511 ,,, ,, ~ "' ---0 0- 2Sh " . "" I S~• " ,. " " ' " " p , 16~. ' " "• "" • .,. " . " " . ,,. ·~ .. ,,. ... , ... .. " ~· •• IC N f'Vu 1C1,1 ..... 1 IC I• oto:C ... <• 16 --ICnottHtl If~-Komg IO :: ' 1\',-Lt fal lt•cl~ '' 'l-1\/o LAI; l:O'I AM 111;,, , L•ke Sii Mn 17'1 ->tl&Mlll' :16 1 I _ • l•nt WO<>d 10 _ lo LATOU 9 Fd 1 , LCA Cor11 17 -1 leG I ll (p 5 -' "-•~ Renl ll 23 = ~ Letdt Intl 19h-lo ~::'rco w3; 21' -~ lttEnl J d ·~·-·-1~ Lee Ntll Co •>-' l.,,kin Pr 1 n -\It Le!gh Pr 36 1) •-\0 Ltl1u t Ttc " ~IV. Le11111r C11 12 ..._ 'loll Ltr...,.st IO IJV. Ltrllll! wt1 ~+ \\ LnlltF )1q ~ •• ~ ~ l bft!'f Ftb .....-I Lrt>e ty Ll4 1WI+ .. LIUIAnn I<*. < + • t/IVLYM In 51'-\lo l'IColn Am llm-Vi Laoge Slllit 1'4-\; Loe#'ll!IM it L-ITll wt LOOill c 111 11Vi-"' L1GnSv 1 15 17'.-lo Lou 1 Ctm J ~'t-~ L\8 Ind 0 16 , L Atro 1Sd 15 -:ij,tTV"-'O WI S'"-~ TV Co Wl1 1••-"1. Lundv l!ltrn ll -•• Lrnch Con• ' . ... _ • MICrOdv Cll 11~+ ~Mt PSv 1 73 6~ T 1 Mt orv Nd $ • MtmMrl 11 6 ._ 0 Mt nt1 Ota I -Minot! $1 I 1 .__ \ Mtnooocl 60 11.._ .:i_ Mlll'll Tr .50 14 '>--~r~M~ .! , Mt k cont ,..v,+ '" Mt lfn.. Ind l) -v, Mtril"I llld ,. ·-... Mtl llll'ld '11 ,µ.,._ '-Mt ttM:lt "?~; n Mt1tt,.. ,, 101i>-"> Ma!RH t1d I,_ Vo MI U/Bto fCI t 'o-Vo M~t fncl1t •••+ 1~ Mc rorY wt 111'>-~ ~'louw~ 1'111+ \ ..1Q 1•"'1 McKMlt to 11~ ,1 M<ICIOn (11 1' -~ ~:::· fW113 ,:1~ !t :,;::g:Jwl I\ 3.11.\-ti Mtd~ S2 1~~\1=1~ I~ ll h-V:i M-M;Q Ml •1-ViMtrltN ~ 1 ~+ " Sf:"°l•ra 1~ "-I~ a ~G: ~g 31 ~+ \\ M/~i pf "' •},,._llh Mc ow•vt 11..._ \ MOd Co ,0 <o M/ll MI 10 ··-'>MOwlt Oin • •-o M/clWFI 3'g Sitt-\ M go 1!1 n 111 •T" V, M /I Wiii lO 10 -\\Ml lOny~ 4 10\o M llOIO lt~Y S',.._ ~ M rroAI I IO 27 +l'llo Min or ,...., 11." Moll:1nT elf Ill.Ii.-u, Miit Cotvrl 1•'4 Mob It H I' 11 -~Mocfn M•d t lo-\.'/ ~OOCI lr1t;Or lSV.-" Otll E Kl 55\ii-I~ MTllGrl no p,,_ ~ Motts uo ii • + Mould"° In Mw/.S ~ uv,+ \~ Mov •l•tl In 1'-h MPB Co >! *'° MPO llldto l'O + \\ MP.S 11111 1:i:-\> M11ltl A 0.0 1• + \'o N1<1c1 Inds .&S -J"1 N1rd1Mc 111 14~1•~ NllBl 111 H 1J 1.-"I Nt t G111 Wh '"t \" Nt!On wt1 n ,cf.I,& ~ N111 Hit II t7-'~NllndWI 7 llfi N11I l(lnnw lo.lo-~\ NI MO'Enl A " + ~r It ~:r•m: 1• ~ N!I s.tmlcen O -\Nr Sonnlna 17 -lo Na S"llll'I 11 1-N•IW dlf ~ 21 _, 4 Nte<IPk 01 l1V.-Vi N~ltnt J1 t+1 ~ Nt v Doro JI Ne'~ ltM ll • Newcor ., •••-\ti N~Eo flue 61,lo-11,, NewH 81119 l _1,N1w dr Mn l 'o-\\ N~~· Ar 111'1-\) NwPa • Mn 1•-,NwPo •)'cf , •• ~ .. NYTlmf eo 1 ~-o:.. N 10Fs... 111 1~-'• NJll1fv 21d s-1 NM l'ldUI 9 Na.t l'ld Inc 11._ •~ Nori ou Rv Y• No•leok lnct1 17~ No.t.rn Ravi ,,_ \~ No Ctrl Ollr lt~-... N111111 Air 21 -11,j, N~ p p1 "" t -•1 NNGMob w! 7\._ Yi NO'o'G Coro ,,__ Nve 1tr Dlt :lfV.-·~ Nveor Coro 1~ ~I NurnK 0 IG 3i~ \\ 1?~ Vi F~ncoro ,,..._ "" lcl8 :., er •\.'/+ \1 KC Co r. ""'"-1 I~ T~ -","--. V:i ht lnchnll -• m" t't wt Ito-U. Oll.Jtp )' 2 •lontl 0 d rm•lld llld Su1 Ylll\ )0 uldr s-r YttlldO .0 t rlt• Ste Sh D"61d •~ d Eltc •l'O F \ ~ tlll.Alr n /llarlcet Traill DAILY ,!LOT J ;:_ llO .... "-"' ~,, ,,~ J \,-\.Ii ,., .. )flll; --1, w ll "-31 ,, ........ j1 11 1 II \ !Ill--~ I D '2 ......... 'I\ 1 r.o 14 1111 +I ' lit 117\lo 111~>1' IOI "'' ~'-' 41'-11.9 " Jl • ni,, ,,..,_,..., ' .... " ).l' ... -1•• soi. 11 • Ml..--1 1 Ill 111 IJl _ .. IS• S4 -t •'Ol 6'llo ... -• Ol 7t ,,,,,_, 1 ~IO .stl.~ ,110 50 • §0 se SI Ill \O'I • 110 111 ,, "',,. '• IU !Sl~ 11 ''• 31 l -'-M n 21 n t1110 i 1 0 ' " ,.,. «I • 4 • I), ... 1. ''•-~ ,t ~:: ~ . !.\.! 111 XI • l' 1'"1 7 • _J 41 .. ,, ~ • ·w ft\~ ll~ ~ ~ S611'121 1 11G 10'2 ltll 01 I 11 6 o • ,. ,, • 21'• ,, llt -·· 8 t I '1no11 1• ~ . ' .. . 71 38 37 J/1 tslo 1 o l\.- •' IUI? 1•' • 16' I ~ ' . ,, . """' _.,.,_ 3~1 \JI 1]1 6' l' ~; uf )I o ]j 20t 31 ,. , ., •1 I )I )~ ,., ••• •1 UI lO ~ ·~ ' . . " l l 1-• . " •l • ~ ~ . ' " + ,.._ Finance Briefs e Standarll 011 SAN FRANCISCO -Stan- d1rct Oil of Cahforn1a reporll • ntt Income or $122 989 000 for the fi rst quarter of 1972. compared with $119 87S 000 for lhe same period in J!?t Figures presented al the stockholdert mttting b e r e showed first quarter tarnmas 11 $145 per shnre campartd with ~1 41 last year First quarter revenues 'l'tre St G66 m1lhon largest 1n lhe company s hlstory reported board chairman O N ~1\nu lfo\\tVtr these gnhl" \\ere oflset by lower "'1dunl Juel oil pr1cts ind increa.sed taxt.11 he said • • I I l JJ DAILY PILOT Tutsd.J.1, M~J 11, 1972 l'••Hv Clrru• by BU KJ!ane "Mommy, were the ghosh you and Daddy were ·watching an TV reel or not?" Fishing Industry Menaced NEW YORK (UPI ! -Many business !inns s u p p o r t ecological and environmental improvement grudgingly, bul one industry does so wit~ messianic zeal because its survival depends on it. "If water pollution and abuse of the environment kill oil the t fish , we're out of business ," said Tom Lenk. president of Garcia Corp. ot Teaneck, N.J., the world's l eading maker·s and distributors or fishing tackle. His competitor, Everelt R. Hames, vice-president o f Shakespeare Co. of Kalamazoo, Mich., agrees. Hames, who is president of the Anleri can Fishing Ta c k le IlnaJ1w.furn~ urondenol 1lfimm® Manufacturers Association de- votes all his t i m e at lt~,;t ·' I ' ' .. Mercnry Mining Tow11 Will Oose Shakespeare to ecologi~al and environmental probl ems. Not Jong ago, Shakespeare set an example for other industries in the Kalamazoo region by cleaning up an effluent prob- •1 ·lem al its own plant. Lenk and 1-{ames said all tackle makers are acutely conscious of the need for im-~ !DRIA, Calif. (APl -This mining town shuts down at the end of school th.is year, its 12().. ·year history ending in the con· cern over ecology af14 pollu- tion. Idria iS a company town, ex- isting solel y because its cin- nabar mines have been for some time the biggest source of quicksilver in the Western Hemisphere. Doom was sounded recently when the New Idria Mining and Chemical Co. infonned Jts stockholder s it was losing money and halted produclion. The price of mercury is about one-third of its former price, with demand dow n to half since 1969, an<!,.the com- pany told Its stockholders that for the past nine months it has lost $100 on each 75-pound flask of mercury it produced. In a remote corner of San Benito County, 80 miles west of Fresno and 160 miles southeast of San Francisco. ldria never has been a metropoli!. In 1969 it had 150 families, and soother 50 families lived proved ecology just as they - at New Almaden in Santa became conscious years ago or: !'l. Clara C:Ounty where the com-the need for fish conservation · pany operated. another mine and more raising of trout and until recently. bass in state and privately owned hatcheries. Some 31 families are still ''Some little manufacturers here, waiting for their children in the business devote an to finish the school year. enormous amount of their "I guess I'll have lo start personal time to the cause." hik S)lfrtS over again," says John Castro. said Hames. lie also said the e whose father was a miner Sportfishing Institute and the here before him and who plans Izaak Walton League raise by ken11ingtOll to move to a trailer he owns money constantly to support in Hollister. campaigns for ecological and . k 4 • • -I He has been laid off before environmental improvem~nt. W1de-trac ed s.ripes 1n racing co ors I.. Garcia not only publishes circle our g ang of long and short material on ecological prob-. , h bl Pollution Jems and conservation but sleeved shirts. They re was a e. L--------~ has active programs of its They've g ot pockets fore and aft. during low mercury price periods, but the mine always started up again. The market began an a\1- timc skid in 1969 when star- tling mercury levels were found in fish and in se<Ument from industrial plants . using mercury. Modem techniques had ex· panded the use of mercury dramatically into p a i n t s , pesticides, fungicides a n d other materials. When word -of mercury pollution s p r e ad • manufacturers were quick to find alternate and less corr troversial chemicals t h a n mercury. own. It recently launched a , nationwlde fish restocking pro-They re great fo r you and your g irl. gram. \Vith every purchase of 6 oo: I O 00 a Garcia fishing reel the com-· · · pany buys two hatchery fish and arranges lo have them stocked in the y,•aters of the buyer's choice. Considering that Garcia is the country's biggest seller of reels that can add a lot or fish to the nation's streams and lakes. Garcia also interested Ralph Nader in a program to organize the nation 's 60 million fresh and salt water anglers in a campaign to clean up the waters. Garcia pro- vided Nader with seed money for the campaign. Garcia established a station at its Teaneck plant for the .........-... Lockheed Will Build 'Oil Mop' SUNNYV ALLE, Calil. (AP) -An oil gobbling mechapical mop to clean up high seas oil spills will be built by Lockheed Missile!! and Space Co. for the U.S. Coast Guard, the firm says. "It's terrible to le a ve , because all my years are here," says Mrs. Rosa Garcia, wife of a miner. "My children were born here, and I have family bl!ried here." "I never read much about It mercury pollution and I don't know whether they are right or wrong," said Albert Vera , 56, and 4-0 years in the mines. He's looking for a new job. collection of recyclable waste materials. The more material recycled., the less chance there will be to find effluents that pollute streams. Garcia also gave up its sales-oriented exhibit at the --.......... 1 ~ Lockheed :said the prototype system will wipe up 200 to 1,200 gallons of oil a minute, depending on sea conditions and the thickness or the spill . Designers say the 12,500 pound cleaner can be deployed to the site of a spill by vessels as small as the Coast Guard's 95--foot cutters. The device will be moored within a boom system and oil will be scooped up 0by the skimmer and pumped to large fl ating rubber bags. The full bags wlll be towed to the nearest port, Lockheed said. The system is to be built un· der a $705.790 contract, Lockheed said. Operations manager Ben Balley contends the mercury pollution scare was due to alarmist talk and that no one really knows ho"' mercury gets into living tissues nor how much mercury it takes to poison a person. What puzzles Vera and some others is that despite handling the red ore constantly they have su ffered no ill ef£ects. John Castro has spent four years as a fireman tending the smelting furnaces, says he 's never been ill and thinks anyone who beromes i 11 around a plant like this is careless about fumes. tl-fexican prospectors discovered the deposits o{ crimson cinnabar here, which the Indians used as a source of their body paints. The mine has been "·orked most or the time since 18.54. Herbert Hoover once was a major stockholder. Among those leaving will be Christopher and S a n d r a Langley. husband-a n d-wife teaching team who run the eight grades of the primary school. They're down to -21 pupils now. 11we will be sad to leave,'" says Mrs. Langley. "This has been a good life among strong people who are no better or . worse than other places. but I 'think stronger, kindlier and more friendly." Some of the remaining residents plan to move to Bakersfield or Fresno. None ex~ts to find a place where they and their children can roam so freely. indust ry's biggest an nu a I show, that of the Tackle Manufacturers Association big Wheel and substituted an ecological acuon display. J b A m ® A fisherman himself. Lenk eanS Y • says he has contributed a lot . or personal time to c~n· Pegger® bush jeans for all the ne1gh- servation just for the selfish b h d d I d I reason that he wanted to catch or oo pe a ers ••• guys a n ga s more fish. More than IO yea rs alike. soft crushed denim flares of cot- ago he \Vas instrumental in .d b I I k t helping to get Congress to ap-ton, w1 e et oops, cargo poc e s. propriate money for the first J 0.00. national marine research pro-Th p t Sh gram on behalf of sports e an op fis hermen. Pollution Standards Uncl1anged WASHI NGTON (UPI) - Contrary to a UPI dispatch. the Environmental Protection Agency is leaning toward tough regulations to prevent water pollution caused by discharge of human wastes from boats. A UPr story Tuesday quoted EPA sources as saying the standards proposed a year ago had been s ub stantia ll y weakened. But higher ranking officials of the ;igency has told UPI t~ day the report was erroneous. The standards have not been fin ished. these sOurces said, but are likely to require treat- ment of wastes equivalent to the serondary treatment recommended for municipal ~wage plants. HAMS .. • the belt circuit by beehelll Going oround wi(h the best jeons in town ... our new collection of leothers, topestries •.. oll buckled boldly. 6.00-10.00. University Shop • " • . So Good It WID Haunt You 'Tll It's Gone" it~s at the broadw~y ln:AJL STOHS 11H f. C.. H......,, C-olot ..__ '7>·- lW S. ........ A111•1Na 6JS.2461 -- ANAHEIM -444 N. Euclid 1714) 511•1121 NEW'ORT 41 F•thio11 ltl•11d 17141 644-1212 HUNTl~ON I EACH CERRITOS ORANGE, MALL OF ORAN61 ••• L c. ., M II '''' Na. Tuttill ·"•-• 1111 Edi11 r A••11v• •t '" •• • ... " ..... (71 41 lt2-J3JI f21JI 160·041 I 1714) ''I-Ill I SHOP 10 A,M, t. t :JO P.M. MONDAY, l~ROU&H .FAIDAY. SATURDAY JO lo..M. t1 6 P.M. SUNDAY 12 NOON to S P.M. ' ., 7 l l • 7 -·--- Lag111la Bea~h VOL. 65, NO. 130, 3 SECTIONS, J PAGES • Peki11g · Heard Fro11a Chinese Charge Ships Attacked TOKYO (AP) -Two Chinese ships anchored in North Vietnamese waters were "brazenly and repeatedly attacked" by U.S. planes and warships over the weekend, Peking said in a broadcast ear· Jy Wednesday. , The broadcast, carrying a statement by the Chinese Foreign Ministry, said some Chinese crew members and Vietnamese civilians aboard the ships were wounded and both ships were se~iously damaged. It said the ships were anchored off Non Ngu Island. Nghe An Province. The statement said the incident "constitutes a gravl!: provocation against the Chinese people" and added: ''The U.S. government must immediately stop its act of provocation~ of attacking Chinese merchant ships and prevent the recurrence o( similar i n c i d e n t s . Otherwise it must bear full responsibility ' . . for all the grave consequences arising therefrom ." The Chinese news agency said three U.S. warships fired "many shells" on the two vessels the evening of ?i1ay 6. 'Ibe following day around noon "many U.S. aircraft bombed and strared" the ships. The news agency added the ships were again attacked by "many" U.S. planes Pair Shot Dead At Their Door In Westminster • By TERRY COVILLE 01 tfll O.Lly 'II•! 51111 A Westminster couple were shot to death early this morning on the doorstep of their home, apparenUy as they return· ed from a night out. Police said Frank Marcus Schiavone, 41, and his wife, Shirley Rine Schiavone, 44. were both shot ln the back as the.y stepped through the doorway of their home at 6202 Choctaw Drive. Their bodies were discovered by their 11-year-old son, Steven, who was asleep in his bedroom, but woke up when he heard the shots, police said. One neighbor said he heard the muffled shots about 2:20 a.m., looked out his win- dow and saw a medium built, lightly clothed man running around the corner of the sChiavone home. Police investigators said they have no theory yet on why the double murder was committed. The murder weapon has not been found. Schiavone, a pressman for the Long Beach Independent Press-Telegram, was shot in the back while his wife was hit in the bead and in the back, by an as yet unknown caliber of bullet, police said. . The couple were apparently s~ot fr~m outside, police explained , and their bodies were stretched across the open doorway when st.even found them. A neighbor, Peter Garland, described the Schlavones as "good people". He said th.ey have a son, John, in Burbank, and anOther son, Richard, who was wounded twO weeks ago in Vietnam . - .Mother neighbor, Joe ~1aher, added : t•There's a numb shock when you hear something like this. The who I c neighborhood is worried." Police investigators spent the day searching the house and yard for the weapon or weapons and any other signs of ''What happened. The boy Steven, attends Finley School tn 'the w~stminster school district. lie t.eY~phoned police after discovering the bod.ieii of his parents. The Schiavone home ls In a housing tract called "Indian Village" in northwest Wt;Siminster, near the San Diego Freeway. La~una Higl1 'S' Club Sponsoring Benefit A baseball benefll for the Laguna Befth High School library will he &pansored by tile girls of the h\gb schOOl"s "S" dub Friday when Ibey clilllense the 1Att:nr1en's Club. The game at the high achoo! bueball lield will get under way at 7:30 p.m. and aft ~di will .go toward purdwe ol needed books for· tile school library. A donation or $1 !or adul~ and 50 cents fer studtnta will he"uked. ' the afternoon of May 8. ln Washington, a State Department spokesman said "we don't know anything about it." Lawrence In, Out of Contest For Council The second Laguna Beach city council election campaign of 1972 got ()ff to a confusing start this week, with civic leader fiarry Lawrence taking out nomination papers. then announcing bis withdrawal from the race, all within 24 hours. However, scheduled to run as a poten- tial successor to Councilman Edward C. Lorr, whose recall will be sought July 25, is planning commission chairman Carl E. Johnson Jr. Johnson, 50, of 6116 ~fystic View St., confirmed this morning that hls nomina· tion pa~rs have been taken out and will be circulated by James Dilley. A IO-year Laguna Beach resident and former president of the Civic League, ·Johnson is a chemist ·employed as a senior research associate with Chevron Oilfield Research of La Habra. Lawrence, who was top runner-up in the April council election, took oot his own nomination papers at the city clerk's office Monday, but announced thls morn- ing he will not be a candidate after all. "I picked up the papers with the full in- tention or running," Lawrence said, "but on ~1onday afternoon there was an unex- pected development concerning my business and I find it necessary to leave for the Orient right away. I realized I just wouldn't be able to give the council the time I would want to give it, under the circumstances. It's just not right at this time." The prominent Laguna Beach civic leader, owner of Warren Imports. said he will be leaving for the Orient in about three days and may be away for a month. Lawrence said he was proud of all the support he had .received in his earlier council race, when he garnered 2,133 votes, but was defeated by Charlton Boyd, with 2,834 votes and Roy Holm, with 2,798 votes. "It was my full intention to run again and I'm really disap- pointed," he said thls morning. However, he added "I feel the recall is a sad thing and that it is undeserved." Petitions seeking the recall of coun· cilman Lorr, who was elected in 1970, were filed April 9. On May 3 the city clerk armounced that 2,672 of the 3,098 signatures on the recall petitions had been verified against the master register of county voters, a sufficient number to validate the petitions and force the coun- cil to set a recalJ eltttion. On the selected date, July 25, voters will be asked to vote for or against the recall of Lorr. and to vote for-a suc· cessor, should he be recalled. P1thlic Hearing .r On Development Set Wednesday The first public hearing on two possible futures ror development of South Laguna will he held by the Orange County Pian· ning Commission Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. at Aliso Elementary School, 2154% Wtsley Drive. Two plans -one · representing the views or the South Laguna Civic Associa- tion and the other espousing the opinions of maJar landowners -will be con- sldertd. The association plan, prepared by archilect Fred Lang and a commltt,. ol urban planners, contend' that South La(una should grow to abQIJI 10,000 per- 901l!l and that only SO or the llOO hilhide acm he developed. The landownen ' plan. prepartd by Roy Gohara of CST Engineering of Newport Beach, CBiiJ for !10 or tile llOO acr., to be developed. • OR~NGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, MAY 9, "1972 BERKELEY PROTEST OF PRESIDENT NIXON'S BLOCKADE OF NORTH VIETNAM Police Car Burned During 01mon1tr1tion by 1,000; Some W1r1 Arrested Six Arrested at Berkeley Empty Police Car Burned in Antiwur Protest By The Associated Press Antiwar demonstrations er u pt e d throughout California as students and others protested President N i x o n ' .s mining. of North Vietnamese ports. Most demonstrations were peaceful but Violence erupted in' the city of Berkeley and the University of California campus there. In San Jose, police said two fire s, ap- parently caused by incendiary devices. caused $200,000 dan1age early today at an Army reserve station and $1,000 damage to a Navy-Marine training center. At Berkeley, six persons were arrested Monday night after .about 500 antiwar Speelal Meeting demonstrators overturned and .set fire to an empty police •car during a torchlight paMde and ripped down an eight.foot· hlgh chain-link fence around the former "People's Park," focus of a 1969 universi· ty disturbance. After destroying the fence, about 350 of the group heided back toward the cam- pus overturning mailboxes, telephone booths and newsstands and smashing windows along the \•:ay. At least 10 law enforcement <lfficer.s suffered minor injuries, police said. Officers used shotguns to fire ricochet rounds of "silly putty" into the pavement, which then bounced into protesters, sting- ing but not penetrating lbe Oesb. Tear gas was used ()DCe to dispe'rse a group, police said. In Santa Barbara, an estimated · 1;500 persons marched fror11. the student com· munity of Isla Vista, adjacent to UC San- ta Barbara. to U.S. 101, where they blocked traffic for more than three hours early today as a symbol of their op- position to the President's announcement of the mining. There were no arrests, police said. Sheriff's deputies rerouted traffic. After two hours, some of t h e demonstrators marched to the university campus, smashing at least 50 windows in an industrial park in nearby Goleta,. a sheriff's sergeant said. The demonstrators blocking t h e highway left about 3·a.m. Laguna Will Consider At Stanford Univer~ity, some 200 students marched to the campu..s home or President Richard Lyman where they were met by five riot-geared .sheriff's deputies. Program on Waste Tax A spakesman was allowed to bring the group's charges of university complicity in the war to Lyman. He reportedly had DO comment. Laguna Beach's controversial wa ste management tax program will be the subject of a special City Council meeting at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in city hall coun- cil chambers. Members of the council and the public will receive a Cl-page report ()n the pro- gram prepared by City Manager Law- rence Rose. The report analyzes events leading up to initiation of the program , wilich simultaneously imposes a tax .to pay for sewage treatment services and provides for mandatory trash co 11 e ct ion throughout the city. It reviews the arguments for and against placing these charges on the regular property tax, rather than im- posing them as fees for services actually used, cites many alternate methods of financ ing waste disposal and details the billing procedures that caused confusion when the program WM put into effect . five alternatives for cou ncil action are sugge'sted, ranging from scrapping the waste management tax altogether, to keeping the concept but refining it. The report notes that prior to Dec. 31, 1971, persons wanting garbage collection service signed up for It at city hall and paid $1. 7S a month for once-weekly pickup limited to three cans. The city kept 25 cents for tHe general fund and the balance was paid to the contractor. This enabled the city to raise $20,000 a year from a limited number of res ident..s. but thr:rr: was no special charge made for use of the sanitary system, which co.st about $150,000 a year to run, pa fd out of general revenue. lt was necessary to raise additk)r(al funds, Rose statet ... a copdlliorfio a federal· grant for $191 ,000 to finance capital Improvement. to the Plant. the ci· ly being required to provide a financial program to continue operation once the government-financed Improvements were made. Additional cooslderallonl In launching the waste management programq.says Rose, were the council's decision to make trash collection mandatory and to revise a collection contract which had gone for 12 years without any change of conditions or improvements in service. The overlapping billing that occurred when the program was put into effect is: described in the report as "a spectacular mistake" to rectify, in which some $24,000 ln refunds and credits already have been allowed. ' Among arguments against adding the waste tax to the property ta:t, Rose nole3: (See WASTE, Page Z) The street fighting In Berkeley con~ tinued for two hours, with police cars - many with broken windows -charging knots of demonstrators. Police lnform.atk>n officer Richard Berger said that at around 1 a.m. police began making arrests when it was clear some groups would not be broken up. Those arrested were booked for In- vestigation of rioting, malicious damage or resisting arrest, he said. Telegraph and Shattuck Avenues were littered with plate glass from .shattered store windows. Tra sh containers ()f nll sizes were overturned and their contents .set on fire. Fire trucks threaded their way among demonstrators and police cars to put out small blazes. Panel Places 'Stop Sign' On Traffic Signal Bid Laguna Beach planning commissioners flashed a red light Monday night to a recommendation by Wilbur Smith and AMociates that a tretflic .sl~nal be placed at the intersection of Thalia and Glenn- eyre Streets . "Why can't we see the whole plan so we can make Intelligent decisions," asked chairman Carl Johnson. referring to the TOPICS traffic study being conducted by the Wllbur Smith team. "It's not an unsafe corner." Insisted commissioner Larey ca·mpbell, who lives near the lntersectiorJ. ""Y ... but with 1 trallic signal it wnl be safer."" jokingly qu(pped Wayne Moody, dlrtctor or planoin~ and development. lie noted that the poh ce department is .sup. porting the traffic signal reoomemnda- llon, as well as a ~est.ion to increase . the stretl lighting al tile il!ttl"ffCtioo. Jobluon noted he didn't ilA the idfa ol • putting the signal In on a temporary basis since Wilbur Smith was al.so recom· mending the intenectlon be realigned at a later date. ' Commissioner John, M.cDowell said the only /uStUication he could 11ee for the signa wu mention by Wilbur Smith that the light would be part or a strles of signalized lnteraectlons lncludlng Park Avenue and Glenneyre, Legkm Street and Glenneyre and cru., and Glenneyre. Resident BUI Luk called the traffic signal "preposteroua" because It would allow people to hll the two dips In the ln- terltCtion at moderate speeds. lncl'tasidc the chances of accidents and damage lo automobile auspe.nslon .systems. 111 lmag\ne if there .,.as a signal al the intermUon now. Wilbur Smith would probably recomm!nd 1 stop sign -which is what we've got," obstrvtd com- m'••loner Roger Lanphear. .. Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks TEN CENTS 60 Vessels, 350 Plru1es ' Take Part SAIGON (AP) -The biggest U.S. air . and nAva l task force ever assembled in Vietnam began mining the entrances t" l!aiphong and other North Vietnamese ports today and heavily bombarde4 railroads and highi,•:ays in North Vjet· nam . The U.S. Command reported one North RELATED ST.CRIES PAGE 4 TODAY Vietnamese A1IG jet shot down during the mining operation, the .seventh MIG reported downed in four dnys. The command said the initial phases ol the blockade announced by President Nixon Monday night ··have .been suc-- ce.ssfully actomplished" and the Navy planes that dropped the delayed-action. mines to seal off the enemy's harbors all returned safely to their carriers. But the commander of a cruiser- destroyer Ootilla In the Tonkin C:ulf, Rear Adm. Rembrandt C. llobinson, was killed ~1onday night and his chief of staff and his ·operations officer were missing when their helicopter developed engine trouble and crashed as they were trying to land aboard the cruiser Providence. Robinson, 47, was the first admiral t1 die in the Vietnam war. The Navy said it marthaled a force of at lea.st eo ships -41cludlng five aircraft carriers with 356-400 warplanes, four ' cruisers and 30 destroyers -to mine all entrances to North Vietnamese ports, to cut off the delivery of war materials through the_territorial waters o! North Vietnam, and to sever rail and other communlcatlori lines ashore. More sltps wete on the wa y, including the carrier Saratoga from the Atl11ntic Fleet. She was expected within a week. The 7th Air Force has more than SOO .strike planes fl ying fr om bases in Thailand and South Vietnam. U.S. Command spokesmen said air .strikes continued over North Vietnam f.o. day. They gave no details of the day's operatlons but said attacks in the North nearly doubled during the past week to an average of about 200 strikes a day. American planes returned to the Hanoi area Monday for lhe first time in three weeks. The aerial mining of Haiphong cen- tered on a narrow channel called the Canal Maritime which was dredged into the harbor. It Is about a mile long, about 500 yards wide and dredged to a depth or about 20 feet. Other ports on the target list included Hon Gal, Cam Phil, Quang Khe and Dong Hol. The U.S. Command declined to disclose the type of mines used, but those available include acoustic m in es detonated by the noise or a ship's pro- pellers as it passes nearby, magnetic: mines set off a ship's steel hull disrupting the mine's magneti c fi eld and contact mines which detonat e when hit by a ship. The mining operation began at 9 a.m. Saigon time, just as President Nixon was beginning his televised sddress. The President said nations sh.ipping supplies to North Vetnam bad been notified they have three "daylight periods" to get their ships ()Ut or North Vietnamese ports. The notification said the mines were set to (Ste MINES, P1ge II Ora•lfe Weat•er Skies will be fair e1cept for f!arly morning Jow clouds. llighs should range from 69-72 with the lows from SJ.51. INSIDE TODtl Y Th.e mining town of ldria will shut down at the end of. &chool, its 120-year h1.•tory ending in concern ouer ecologu dnd poflu. tio11. Set Sto ry, Paoc 12. L.M. ,,,. t Ctll,.,.I• ' c~ulliM tl·H C•"'lc' II <••n .. !'11 u 0t1lfl Nltlc•t t ••11.n.1 ,... ' •~i.!.lllrwntfll ,, f'lRUl(f l•I I ,.., .. lllHtll ' ...,..".,.. ,, """ U""" I) ' I Mlvlft It Mlll~•I flW!l'lh It Htli.MI N.... I 0r ..... c-" t ,..,tt , .. ,. ii.t~ Mlt*ttt , .. 11 TtltYltllll It 'flltJt..ft '' Wt,llltf t Wlllt• Wttfl '' --·· """' U.14 W•llll "'°" • • • Chief Plans 'Never Give Vp' , To Run-Viet Cong Blast For Cause U.S. Ultimatum Laguna Beach pohce Chier Joseph Kelly plans to run a few miles hlmselr tonight when 11 relay team from the Los Angeles Police Department p a s s e s through town on its ¥.'ay to Canada. PARIS (AP ) -The Viet Cong accused President Nixon toclt1y C1f laying down ~n ultimatum to the Viet name se people, but said that they will "ne\•er give up as long HS they have not realized thl'ir .sacred Clb- Chief Kelly, an avid jogger. says he did not run hi1 usual t.,.,·o miles this morning to sa ve his energy for the midnight run. One member or the 12-man team will be doing his JO n1ile lap when the en- touragttpllsses through the Art Colony at about 11:40 p.m. Local officials have planned 1 reception for the non-running team members, compltte wllh red carpet and re freshments, on El Paseo. The law officers :.i re making tlle 2.~ mile ruo from fl.1e1ico to Camid:i in com~ memoratlon of Mexi can, American and Canadian policemen who have been killed in lhe line of duty. The leant left Tij uana lhis morning anti Is expected to arri ve in Vuncouver. B.C., on Ma.v 19 during National Police Week . Jn addition to Chief Kelly. member!! or the Laguna Beach lligh School track team and other local joggtrs are ex· peeled to accompany the reh1y team member through town "Maybe "'e'IJ even li!Ct ~!iss Laguna t() trv and Jasso him fthe single runner) with a lei," Kelly .s.1 ld or the reception plans. Newport Urges New Rerouting For Freeway Newport Beach Mayor Donald A. Mcfn. nis wants the Newport Free way to come to an end -on the Coast Highway in Huntington Beach. Agreeing with the idea , Newport coun· c:ilmen Monday night yoted to send a representative to the May 18 meeting or the California Highway Commission to suj:l'gesf it. The council turned down a State Public Works Department request to forestall a decision on proposed condominiums in the present pat h of the route, con. dftionally approving the 494·unit Ne"·port Crest project unanimously. The request triggered Mcinnis' pro- posal, however. The Newport Freeway is now planned to terminate at either the Pacific Coasl Freeway -if there ever is one -or nt West Cot1st ~Ughway at the Balboa Boulevard.Superior Avenue intersection in Newport. "We oug ht to orfer a reasonable allernative," ~fclnnls observed, and then he made his. "Bring the freew<iy down Superior Avenue (as planned now ) to the bluffs then swing it west (behind 1'!i'C\Jport Shores) Rnd connect It with the Coast Hig hway in Jlunllngton Beach." Mcinnis said Huntington Beach or. ficials have voiced no objections to such a proposal. Hunt ington Beach Mayor Al Coen could not be reached for comment on the pro- posal this morning. Unit Ponders . Zone Splitting For l1tdustry A Laguna Beach planning comm ission sub-committee may recommend May 15 that the M·IA Oight manufacturing) zone in Laguna Canyon be split lrito two Cir more zones. One zone might allow arts and crafts ';enters, ano ther research companies, tic., l'iaid Com1nissio ner Roger Lanphear, who along wilh John McDowell Is stu· dy.lng revision or the M·lA zone. The boundaries of the separate zones might be formed by looking at present uses in the existing M·lA zone or by lot size, i fcDoweU told fellow commissioners at a study session ~1onday night. He termed the division concept "a vast improvement CIVer what we hnve now." Commissioners agreed that the light manulacturinu zone should ae"commod ate local residents and tha t intensive manufacturing uses remain out of the zone. Chairman Carl Johnson said tie was more concerned about the appearance of a use than the use itself. "I wouldn't mind a car storage yard if it could not be see n," he explained. An· advantage of di viding up the M·JA zone, noted Johnson, is that it would reduce the number of non·conformlng uses as opposed to revising the standar<ls for the ~1·1A zone alone. "I'd hate lo plwik down a new zone ·aver ihe entire area and see many CJf those new buildings beco me non-cCJnforming," said Johnson. Responding lo a question from the chairman, Lanphear and McDowell said they would ha ve a substantive recom- mendat ion on the division pl an read ied by lhe ~lay 15 regular meeting of the com· mission. Charles Pearson, County Leader, Succumbs at 73 Charles A, Pe arson, 73, a member or the Local Agency Formation Commission and a director of the Metropoliltin Water Dislrict, dled ~1onday after a brief illne5s, Pearson was known to thousands as 1'1\1r. Anaheim." I-le "'as a cily coun- cilman for 25 years from 1935 to 1960 and mayor of the city for the last 19 years o( his terms in office. Pearson also \\'as a founding member of the Anaheim Planning Cornmissio n in 1927 and was on the first board of the P.1etropolitan \Valer District and the fir st organization commission of the Local Agency group. M~nnki sai<\, the re-rout ing "·ould preserve the ofl'porh.1nity for a future marint1 west of Newport Shores. Fron& Page l WASTE ... He founded and was owner CJ! Anaheim Truck and Transfer Company. He was also past president of the California League or Cities and of the Associated Chambers of Comn1ercc of Orange CCJU/l· ty. Tn 1956 Pearson \Va s na1ned ''Man of lhe Year " by the Orange County Press Club, Jtttivts." In i!s first <.'()mment on r\lxon'.!S decision to blockade North Vietnam 's ports. the Viet Cong delega tion to the Paris peace tnlks ca lled on Nixon to "lnl· medlalely hall all of his acts of war ..• ;ind engage in serious negotiations. " .. , Mr. Nixon gives an ultimatum to the Vietnamese people to oblige them to capltulate," the statement oontinu~. ''lie tritS to hum iliate a people which is struggling for its independence and freedom, and ~'hich never has done harm to the American people. "Oearly, the Nixon administration acts like a barbarous aggressor and like an In· ternational gendarme, defylng all the standards of international Jaw, and all in- ternational conventions, as well as all moral principles." 'l'he statement added that "the Nixon administration is badly mistaken in believing that threats. violence and deceitful maneuvers will .subjuga te the Vietnamese people." It said the United Sta tes must respond to the Communist peace plan calling for conditional withdrawal of American troops, the resignation of President Nguyen Van Thieu and formation of a coa lition government. "This is the only correct way to settle the South Vietnamese problem, COil- forming lo the interests of the Viet. namese and American people •.. n the 5tatement said. "The road toward ag. gravation of the aggression, escalation of the war and accumulation of crimes can only lead the United States toward more serious failures." L'llumanite, ·the French Communist party newspaper, said the mining of Nortlt Vietnam's harbors was "a new act of war whose consequences are un· predictable. Not only does it provoke an aggravation or the conflict but it threatens its extension. "Nixon criticized the Soviet Union for aiding the Democratic Republic of Vie~ 11am. This a cynical attitude coming from a man who has sent to Indochlna an ex. peditionary corps supported by an enormous air and na,1al neet," the party paper said. Se1iate Moves To Repeal Law SACRAMENTO !UPI ) -A bill repealing California's nearly cen~ tury-old law prohibiti ng the im- porting of Chinese and Japanese women for purposes of prostitution has cleared the State Senate. State Sen. Alfred Song, aut hor of the bill, said it would not open the doo r for the importation of prof. tilutes from the Far East. "It simply removes the last vestiges of Oriental exclusion laws from CJ ur statutes," he said. He said importation of prostitutes Is outlawed by slavery laws !hat would not be affected by his legislation. Farmers Picket Cou11ty Of fices UPI Ttl-.Ml9 CITES DANGERS Nixon Advisor Ki11in91r Soviet Summit Go-ahead Seen By Kissinger WASllINGTON (AP) -Dr. Henry A. Kissinger said today President Nixon realizes his late!t Vietnam moves "will create short·tenn dilficulties for Soviet leaders" but fully hopes to proceed with P.1osco w summit talks May ·22. Kissinger, the President's ass istant for national security affairs, said the United States received no indication from Moscow as to whether the Soviets will want to proceed with the summit. He said "it will probably be a da y or so" before fonnaJ reaction is received. While saying Nixon's attempt to block receipt of Soviet war supplies to North Vietnamese ports presents fi1oscow with diff iculties, Kissinger said the Soviets "permitted a situation that posed mas- sive difficulties for us." The presidential aide, who repeatedly restated an American ·willingness to resume public or private peace talk s, told a ne~·s conference the Nixon ad· ministrati on "perhaps underestimated lhe massi\'c influx of offensive weapons. Kissinger argued that the Soviet arms shipments tipped the military balance in Indochina in favor of Hanoi's forces. Responding to questions. Kissinger said the Nixon move s involve "some r isk." He added: Fro111 Page l MINES ... activate autom atically at 3 a.m. PDT Thursday. President Nguyen Van Thieu welcomed the U.S. mining of North Vietna1nese ports and predicted that South Viet· naniese forces will recapture some te r· ritory lost to enemy forces in the current offensive. In a speech on national radio and television tonighl , Thieu called President Nixon's announcement "a strong decision to show the determination of the United States to help the South Vietna mese peo- ple fight com munism.·· He said Hanoi's decision thus far has created 650,000 civilia n refugees and 25.000 ci vilian casualties. Thieu sa id South Vietna1n ese forces had been forced to abandon territory in Quang Tri, Kontum and Binh Dinh prov- inces because of heavy enc m y press ure. But he added: "\Ve will retake some territory in the coming day s. 'Aggress.ive Acts' ' Tass • Ill Attack I 12 Hours Later 1'.tOSCO\V tAPJ -Tass accused Presi· de nt Nixon today of "naked aggressive acts" and violating international law in his actions against North Vietnam -and conceiva bly against Soviet shipping. both governmen1s \vant, a visit two v.•eeks a~·ay. The Soviet news agency T a s s distributed a six-paragraph dispa tch under a Washington dateline, abou t 12 hours alter Nixon's annou ncement o! plans to block the approaches to North ' . Vietnamese porls . 1'be president made his an nouncemtnl on a Soviet natlonaJ holiday al 4 a.m. ~1oscow time and no word on it appeared in the papers. The papers instead were full of Victory Day proclamations. including an order ot the day by P.tarshal Andrei A. GrechkCJ, the defense mlnisfe r, on the "constant co mbat read iness" of Soviet and \Varsaw Pact forces. Tass said that in addition to mining port entrances. Nixon gave orders for 'Am erican al'med forces to strike blo"·s on internal "'aters. rails and roads" in North Vietnam. lt said ''.Nixon has tried lo justify these naked aggress ive acts, \\'hich me11n an aggravation of American interference in Vietnam and the violation of nor1ns CJf Internationa l law, as saving the lives of 60,000 American soldiers." Tass said Nixon also blamed "'a Com· munist threaf to South Vietnam" for the actions. adding such a threat "is used by An1erican propaganda !CJ justify the acts of escalation of \\'ar against the Vietnam people." Tass said Nixo n promised the United States wants to end the war and take its troops home, ''but the practical steps as well as the measure annou nced speak to the contrary." The dispatch noted the President's assurances tha t his decisiom were not aimed at any th ird country. While the President pointedly directed his remarks to the Soviet Unio n, Tass made no men- tion of specific references to the Soviet Unio n in the speech. The Tass report contained no indication of \vhat the Soviet response "'ould be to. the direct challenge posed to the Kremlin by Nixon's_4e.cisions. There w'as no immedia te response from C",on1munist China or North Korea. Their broadcasts did not n1ention Nixon's move. The Soviet leaders apparently must halt shipments of \11ar ma terial to Hanoi or risk having their ships sunk by the mines U.S. planes are pl anting tit the en· trances to North Vietnam's ports. They also must decide whether they can still be host to Nixon for the summit meeting Tliat 'Visitor' Not Roommate A Laguna Beach man who mistook do"'nstairs noises for his roomm·ate Mon. day night lost an .expensive camera and some stereo equipment to a burglar. Police Sgt. David Avers said the crime was reported nllnutes after it occurred by Renard Crews, of 1021 Gaviota Drive. Value of the Joss was set at $550. Crews told investigators he heard noises downstairs at about 11 :.30 p.m. But thinking it wa_, his roommate, he went back to sleep. He awoke minutes later and. becoming suspicious, went down lo investigale. By then, the thie! had fled \Vith the camera and stereo and the front door was standing open . Laguna ilTethodists Plan R1nnn1age Sale The Laguna Beach Methodist Church Pre-School Ydll sponsor a rummage sale r1·om 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday in the \Voman's Club. 286 St. Anne's Drive. Last year Grechko's order of the day specifically me ntioned the "imperialists of the United States" among the foes or communism. Th is year, it made no men- tion of the United States, but Grechko said the Soviet Union is "giving assistance and 8Upport to the heroic Viet· namese people.·• Deadline Set For Hill Ciimh In Laguna Beacl1 Cyclists who \Vish to participate in the ~temorial Day Hill Clim b on Laguna's spectacular Third Street must return en- try forms ,by May 26, the J1ycees have announced. Forms may be filled out and turned in at the Laguna Cyclery, 240 Thalia St., along with accident waivers to be si gned by participants and also by parents of juveniles entering the event. Prizes will be aw arded in six categories : boys .in fifth and sil'th grades; boys in junior high: girls from fifth grade ot 18 year~; mens junior for high school age up to 18; mens senlor for men 18 and older; and womens senior for women 18 and older. A minimum of eight entries and a max. imum of 20 has been set for each event. The race will be timed from the bottom of the hill to the top. wit h a starling runway of approximately 50 feet at the bottom . No one will be permitted to ride down the hill. The police department has agreed to barricade the area from Park Avenue to Forest Aven ue and Mermaid at Second Street from 10 a.m. to S p.m. on the holiday, A1ay 29. Antique Ar1ns Taken Fron1 Niguel Home Antique weapons valued at nearly S2,500 by the owner were stolen Mond11:y by burglars who broke Into a Laguna Niguel home, Orange County sheriff's of- ficers said. Deputies said intruders at the home of Timothy Patrick Kahn. 24276 La Hermosa took a Spanish crest sword dated about 1640, a 1703-vlntage cavalry saber and two Japanese Samurai swords. Kahn told deputies he was absent from his home at the time of the theft. PHe values the rare weapons at $2,375. PRESS CLASS SIGNUPS SET that this would lay the full cost on all parcels, whether they use the services or f'l()t. Additionally. since property tax is established on ussessed value of a prop- erty. a $100,000 house would pay fi ve lime:; as n1u ch ns a $20.000 house. even though it might be occupied only on ~·eekends, using the services but little. "'·hile the less costly house might be OC· cupied contin uously by five or six per&0ns milking e1tensi ve use of the se r\•ice. In 1962 Anaheim City Park on 1-larbor Boulevard at Lt>mon Street "'IJS renamed in his honor as Charles A. Pearson Park. Pearson is survi\'ed by his widow, Sara Faye, of the famil y ho1nc, 685 N. 1-ft>lena SI .. Anahein1 ~nd a son, James. Funeral arrangements are pending. ritore .than 50 pickets marched in front of the Orange County Fann Bureau of. fices today in a nationwide protest by Cesar Chavez·s United Farm \York ers Union. A spokesman for the local picket s who are marching at 1916 \V, Chapman Ave .• Orange, said their protest aga inst the farm bureaus was because ''its leaders are illegally using their organization lo crush the aspirations of America 's migrant fttrm workers." "\Ve will recapture Quang Tri, the city that \\'e lost becau se of the mistakes ol some leaders or under hard pressure from the enemy ." An early bird preview hour is scheduled from 9 to 10 a.m., wilh a $1 donation. Admission for the rest of the day \Vill be free. Persons wishing to make contributions C1f rummage are invited. to call the chu rch. 499-3088. Signups have started for e series of plant tours and ''how·to" sessions for area club presidents and press chairmen interested in having their clu b new1 published in the DAILY PILOT. For information on how to make a reservation for your club officers, see the box published in the women's section to- day. It's on Page 14. OU.N•I COAST LI DAILY PILOT Tht 0~111111' Ca.$1 DAILY PILOT, ""!ti\ ""lllC't 11 comb!ntd lht NtWl·Pr•u, 11 publlthnl fl'!' thr °''"II" Co111 Publlshlnv Com111ny. Stl* rAtt t'dl!oons ••t ll\lbl!1hfd, Morici•'!' tht'Oll!lh Friday, for Cottt Mt1A, Newport lrtch, t+untl!'9lon lr11cll/F011n!1ln V.illty, Lt vun1 8~1d1, lrv•nr l51ddlllb.lt k •f\d Sin Clem,nrc/ S•n Ju&'! C•11l1!rJno, A ,111911 '1'CllOll•I l'Cl lllilll ,, PUb llslled S•lu'll•Y• •I'll 511N:1•r1. T~ o•+n<lfl.11 ~11bl11hl"!I pl•nf 11 11 .)JO Wttl 8•'1' Srrttr, COlt.1 M111, C1Ulornl1, ,,_,., llob1rt N, W trd ~ ,.tnlcfftll •!Id Publllher J 1r• R. C11rlt'1' \I"' Prn lcf9rlt •nd <>-11 M111t9rr 1 Tho""'' k11wil Editor fho,,,11 A. M..,rph;,., Mtntglftt Ed11Qr Ch1rl11 H. l101 Ri,htrtl I . Ntll AUlll«ll M1111oln; (d1lert l .. -IMtk ..Gffic• lll for11! Aw1/1Mt M1Jlli1t A.J•r•it: ,.0 . 111 666, fl651• °"'"'°'"'" Co1!1 M•1: UI Witt lty lltrllft N=Hd'I: »» Hf'lll'pOn llou1t¥1,. H1111I 11111 IWd'I; 11111 IMtll lkvrr.1 .. ,,,. C It; JU Hor1h El c."'rno ""' , .. .,.... 1714J 641·4J21 C .... tftd :A~.,tlahtt 642•$671 1 .......... A.. h'~"' ' T•l•1••• 4N•t466 °"P'rfftflf, lf71, Of•,... CH11 l'liblltfrr!r'lf C""PWlr. Ht> ,,.._ 1Jltf"lft, lllllSlflllMt, ••fllrill "'"" ,,,. .....,.,lltmtnll llttt lft ,,.., ... ,....,llClllf •llflwf ..-1111 ,... ~·-" ~·llftf -· ~ c:tM. lltlllflt N ici If C.,tt Mri.t. Ct Rlilnl"-llltttcr'-'loll • ., <•"Wr U.U -™¥1 ... IMll U.1tr. fMlll~lrl l'llPlftr'f W.INlllM IQ.61 rNftll'lt'I'. Roge1· Kuntz Winner Laguna Beach arlist Roger Kuntz Is the winner of the $1 ,000 plltchase award at the-11th L8 A1irada Fiest de Aries. Kuntz won the top award for an im- pressionistic oil painting titled "Roger Kun tz." A $500 grnnt av1nrd•wcnt lo Vie Smith of Laguna Hllls. He added. "The farm bureau is 1 strike-breaker because it organizes com- pany unions, it is racist in its policies and breaks the law by using tax exempt money lo attack the v.·orkers' union." The picket said the one day protest was being carried out at· mote than 100 farm bureau of!ices in 34 states. Sa11 Clemente Ma11 Denies ~speed' 01arge; T1·ial Set The alll'gcd manur:1cturrr of larp-e amounls Qf the ilhc11 drug "'Speed'' (metha mphetamilne) In a posh SAn Clement~ residence has pleaded innocent of the rharges and will appear at a preliminary hear ing Alay 2%. ln the mea nti me, police have begun a starch for a ne w suspect in the major case. The latest dispatche~ name a Laguna Beach man wanted under a $$0,000 warrant. · George \IJilliam Cox, 29. arre ted early la st wtek al his honle at 4105 CaUe Abril, In Harbor Estates. remains Jn custody un der $50,000 bail to 11wait h I s , Preliminary hearing later tbJs month ln South Oranie Counly Municipal Court. Cox waa arrested by a do:r.en agents and a federal narcotics bureau field chemlsl Officers allege the man "'ho holds a coDege degree in molecular biology n s producing major quen1111 .. ol lht strong drug In 1 ''"''' labor1lory outfitted wi th expensi\'e ~tar. "The street va lue of lhe monthly pro- duction. agents said. wa1' about $28.000. \Vh ile Qfficers declined to ldentifv the suspect still at large. the man is al.leg«! lo have had a major role in the distribu- tion of the new drug from a Laguna Beach house. Cox. the father of an Infan t. bas listed his occupation as student and part.time house palnte:r. Complaints agalnst him charge the manufocture or restricted, dangerous drugs and possessjon or metham· phetamlne Ingred ients. Jt was those alleged raw materials. said office.r!l, which led to the three- month investigation le11dlng to the arrtsl. Federal agents watching drug ship- ments became susplclous when they allegedly learned that Cox usertedly was ordering largt quantities of materials which are ustd to manufacture the illicit drug. SERVICE .. I How Much Is It Worth? In the carpet business sometimes its worth EVERYTHING! Hardly a day 9011 by that we don't get • call regard iog another company's poor installetion. Occasionally the da(llage resulting from poorly sewn seams or taped seams is not repairable. Then the value of the inve•tment looks pale indeed! Why pay $300.00 or $1500.00 for carpeting ind gamble with th• installation? We maintain all of our own crews, an hught th1 ONLY way to in- stall carpeting-the RIGHT way! The 9reat11t majority of our bu siness i• ~le'rral. There is 1 reason! ALDEN'S CARPETS • DRAPES 1663 Plac9tltla A 'f•· COSTA MESA 646-4838 7 t I t 7 Saddlehaek VOL. 65, NO. 130, 3 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES * * * * * Peking Ireard Fro11a Chinese Charge Ships Attacked TOKYO (AP) -Two Chinese ships anchored in North Vietnamese waters were "brazenly and repeatedly attacked" by U.S. plane! and warships over the weekend, Peking said in a broadcast ear~ ly Wednesday. The broadcast, carrying a statemen t by the' Chinese Foreign Ministry, said some Chinese crew members and Vietnamese civilians aboard the ships were wounded and both ships were seriously damaged. Jl said the ships were anchored off Non Ngu !!land, Nghe An Province. . . The statement said the 1nc1dent "'constitutes a grave provocation again st the Chinese people" and added: "The U.S. government must_ immediately s~op its act of provocation or attacking Chinese merchant ships and prevent the recur.rence of similar i n c i d en t s . Otherwise It must bear full responsibility ' . . for all the grave consequences ar1s1ng therefrom ." Pair Shot Dead At Their Door In Westminster By TERRY COVILLE Of IN l>WIY P'llot Stril A Westminster couple were shot lo death early this morning on the doorstep of their home. apparently as they return- ed from a night out. Police said Frank Marcus Schiavone, 41 , and his wile, ·Shirley Rine Schiavone, 44, were both shot in the back as they stepped. through the doorway of their home at 6202 Choctaw Drive. Their bodies v.•ere discovered by their II-year-old son, Steven, who was asleep in his bedroom, but woke up when he beard the shots. police said. One neighbor said he heard the muffled shots about 2:20 a.m., looked out his win- dow and saw a medium built, lightly clothed man running around the corner of the Schiavone home. Police investigators said they ha ve no theory yet on why the double murder was committed. The murder weapon has not been found. Schiavone, a pressman for the Long Beach Ind.ependent Press.Telegram. was shot tn the back while his wife was hit in the head and in the back, by an as yet unknown caliber of bullet, police said. The couple were apparently shot from outside, police explained, and their bodies were stretched across the open doorway when Steven found them. A neighbor, Peter Garland, described the Scbiavones as "good people". He said they have a son', John, in Burbank, and another son, Ri chard. who was wounded two weeks ago in Vietnam. Another neighbor, Joe Maher, added : "There's a numb shock when you hear something like this. The w h o I e l'leighborhood is worried." Police investigators spent the day searching the house and yard for the weapon or weapons and any other signs of what happened. The boy, Steven, attends Finley School In the Westminster school district. He telephoned police after discovering the bodies of his parents. The Schiavone home is in a housing tract called "Indian Village" in northwest Westminster, near the San Diego Freeway. Reviews Slatecl .. • · Ori Textbooks Basic and supplemental text- books recommended for 1972-73 in the Tustin Union High School District can be revlev.•ed by the public from 7 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday throllgh Friday In the district office. I The offict la al 1111 Laguna Road, Tustin: Public review of Ibo books sug· gested by district study groups formed last November can be made until May 22. At lhal Um<, final ap- proval of the boob by lnlstees ls upected. i The Chinese news agency said three U.S. warships fired "many shells" on the two vessels the evening of May 6. The following day around noon "many U.S. aircraft bombed and strafed" the ships. The news agency added the ships were again attacked by "many" U.S. planes the afternoon of May 8. In Washington, a State Department spokesman said "we don't know anything about it." * * * Soviet Summit Go-ahead Seen By Kissinger WASHINGTON (AP) -Dr. Henry A. Kissinger said today President Nixon realizes his latest Vietnam moves "will cre~te short-term difficulties for Soviet lea ders" but fully hopes to proceed with AfOSCXIW summit talks May 22. Kis singer , the President's assistant for national security affairs. said the United States received no indication from Mo scow as to whether the Soviets will want to proceed with the summit. He said "it will probably be a day or so" before formal reaction is received . While saying Nixon's attempt to block receipt of Soviet war supplies to North Vie tnamese ports presents ~1oscow with difficulties, Kissinger said the Soviets "permitted a situation that posed mas- sive difficulties for us." The presidential aide, who repeatedly restated an American willingness to resume public or private peace talks, told a news conference the Nixon ad- ministration ''perhaps unde restimated the massive innux of offensive weapons. Kissinger argued that the Soviet anns shipments tipped the military balance in Indochina in favor of Hanoi's forces. Responding to question s, Kissinger said the Nixon moves involve "some ri sk." He added: "" "The judgment was that it did not in- volve an unacceptable risk." But he conceded that only events will prove whether the presidential strategy will work. Kissinger said he woul d not expect the (See CHARGl:S, Page I) Advertising Gets Results A Tustin man who advertised a costly diamond ring for sale found himself discussing its value on the wrong end of an automati c pistol Monday night, Orange County sheriff 's deputies said to- day. Deputies said Robert C h a r I e s Bergerson, 29, and three persons iden- tified as witnesses of the holdup at Borgerson's home told them he was held up by i male Negro who had earlier called by phone to make an appointment. Officers were told that the caller brought his gun with him to the home and warned Borgerson and the group before he took the ring: "I don't want to hurt anyone." Borgerson values the ring at $8,000, Schmitz Praises Nixon's Decision Pre'sident Nixon's decision to stem the flow of Soviet supplle_, by mining Nonh Vietnamese harbors was praised today by U.S. Rep. John G. Schmitz CR-Tustin). Speaking on the House floor this morn- ing Schmitz said, "Former Deferise Secretory McNamara said that IO per- cent ol North Vietnam's supplies come through Haiphong Harbor. CUllCng off the potentlal to wage war ls the belt way to be humane to both sktes.11 The congressman added that the President's dttlalon, u <0f1JlllllldtJ'-ln- chltf, "dt,.rves tho full su~ of tho Ame.rican people." . ' • . . . • \ ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, MAY 9, 1972 - BERKELEY PROTEST OF PRESIDENT NIXON'S BLOCKADE OF NORTH VIETNAM Police Car Burned During Demonstr 1tion by 500; Some Were Arrested Six Arrested at Berkeley Empty Police Car Burned in. A-ntiwar Protest By The As1oclated Press Antiwar demonstrations e r u p t e d throughout California as students and others protested President N i x o n ' s mining or North Vietnamese ports. Most demonstrations were peace ful but violence erupted in the city of Berkeley and the University of California campus there. In San Jose, police said two fires, ap- parently caused by incendiary devices, caused. $200,000 damage early today at an Anny reserve station and $1.000 damage to a Navy-Marine training center. At Berkeley, six persons were arrested. Monday night after about 500 antiwar demonstrators overturned and set fire to an empty police car during a torchlight parade and ripped down an eight-foot- high chain-link fence around the former "People's Park," focus of a 1969 universi- ty disturbance. Irvine Council to Get $5,000 Bike Proposal A proposal for city development of bike trails in Ir vine including an immediate $5,000 pilot project linking University Park with UC Irvine will be presented to the City C:Ouncil tonight. The council meets at 7:30 o'clock in City 'Hall, 4201 Campus Drive. The report was drawn by the bicycle trails subcommittee of the Irvine public highways and transportaton committee, at the request of the council nearly a month ago. Bike committee members Gus Hewen, Juanita Moe, Carl Morrison, Tim Tomeny and chairman Roland Schinzinger are recommending fi ve areas for city action. The first is a three-phase outline for trail development that would see striping • this month of a 3.7 mile route along Michelson A venue and Culver and Cam- ptts Drives; a five-year interim bikeways plan requiring $130,000 of city gas tax moneys for 23.3 miles of roadway or shoulder routes, and a longer range $370,000 trail program. The longrange program charts 51 miles of median parkway and separate from highways trails including five miles pro-- jetted in Universi ty Regional Park. They would be built from 1974 to 1982 at an an- nual cost to the city of $45,000, including maintenance. The four other actions the committee recommends are : -Requirements by the city that developers deed bike tra il rights-of-way. -Enactment of an Irvine bicycle code (See BlKE PATHS, Page%) After destroying the fence, about 350 of the group headed back toward the cam- pus overturning mailboxes, telephone booths and newsstands and 1mashing windows along the way. At least 10 Jaw enforcement officers suffered minor injuries, police said .. Officers used shotjt:uns · to fire ricochet rounds or "silly putty" into,tbe pavement, which then bounced Into protesters, sting- ing but not penetrating the flesh . Tear gas was used once to disperse a group, police said. ln Santa Barbara, an estimated 1,500 persons marched from the student com· munity of Isla Vista, adjacent to UC San- ta Barbara, to U.S. IOl, where they blocked lraffic for more than three hours early today as 1 symbol of thei r op- Position to the President's announcement of the mining. There were no arrests, police said. Sheriff's deputies rerouted traffic. After two hours, aome of t h' e demonstrators marched to the university campus, smashi ng at least 50 wlndowir in an industrial park ln nearby Goleta, 1 sheriff's sergeant said. The demonstrators blocking t h I! high way left about 3·a.m. At .Stanford University, some 200 students marched to the campus home or President Richard Lyman where they were met by five riot-geared sheriff's deputies. A spo kesman wa'S allowed to bring tM: group's charges of university complicity in the war to Lyman. He reported ly had no comment. Thi! street fighting In Berkl!ley con- tinued for two hours, with police cars - many with broken windoW3 - charging knots of demonstrators. Tustin District Schools Support Bond Election 34-cent TaX Increase Seen ~ustin Union High School District trust4 ees Monday unanimuosly approved a re solution supporting June 1 election bal4 Jot proposit ion number 2. The measure would authorize sale of $350 million in school bonds. The resolution reads in part· that the Tustin district is "a rapidly gtO\\'lng school district and is fiscally incapable of supporting its school construction pro- gram without assistance under the state school building aid program." The bond issue would replenish the .state building fund and \Yould allot $250 million to help 271 school dlstricts in 54 counties build earthquake-safe schools. The remaining $100 mi llion will go to rapld·growth districts thal have "ex- hausted their bond debt capacity," the ruoluUon reads. Districts can use their own bond funds only up to lbt amount limited by law - fi ve percent of 1 diJtrlct'a total assessed valuation and then can seek statt fu n- ding. Trustees asked that copies or their tn· dontment be sent to all othtr Orange <;iunty achoo! diltrlcll and to the atate 1Docauon boanL In Preliminary Budgei By CANDACE PEARSON Ot '"' IH!rr P'lr.t Stttf • Tustin Union High School District trustees Monday accepted a $10.S million ·preliminary budget for 1972-73 .which would mean a 34-cent tax increase. Trustees cautioned that they were only "accepting" the document "(or study," and would not adopt it at thl~ ti me. Board members Robert Bartholomew and Paul C.lhoun objected to the 34-<ent increase, although it has already been ap- proved by voters through a recent . tax override. CUrrent tax rates for the distr ict, which includes Mission Viejo and University High Schools, Is lt.77 per 1100 asstSsed .valuation. Projected for 1972-73 in. the working budget Js $2.11 per $100 assessed valuation. Superintendent WIUlam Zogg cautioned that the working budget will .. change many times before August " and really only represents anticipated t1penditures. Income and aastued valuatkms are not yet firm. i . If the unification l!lectlons pass June I, this will be the last budget for tht Tustin Union High School District. This too, Zogg said, could affect pro- jections for next year . · Zogg also said "we're really only talk- ing about 1 12 cent tax increase" because lhe equivalent of a 22-ctnt increase was spent during this" yeaf. out of reserves. The beginning balance this year was IU million, but Zogg projects ·only • $400,000 be1IMing balance for 1972-73. The $85.1,35& difference In the two balances. Zogg said, WM money spent over that received from the regular tax r pte last year. But the net effect on tht taxpayer•, Bartholomew pointed out, ls sliU 34 cent s mol"!: on thtlr tax bill. I The maxlmum tax rate for a high School district Is SS ctnls. Voters recentl y approved another three-ye.ar extension of a IJ&.cent override and an addlUonal 49 ctnts, ror 1 total rate of 11.99. The additional 12 ctnt1 ()or a total of (See BUOOET, Pap l) ··-·~ ) ' Today~s F:lul I N.Y. Stoelts TEN CENTS 60 Vessels, ~350 Planes SAIGON (AP) -The biggest U.S. air and naval task force ever assen1bltd in Vietnam began mining the entrances to Haiphong and other North Vietnamese ports today and heavily bombarded railroads and highways in North Viet· nam, The U.S. Command reported one North RELATED STORIES PAGE 4 TODAY Vietnamese MIG jet shot down duflng the mining ope:ration, the se\'enth ~fIG reported downed in !our days. The command said the Ini tial phases of the blockade announced by Presldl!.llt f\lxon Monday rµght "have been suc-- cessfully accomplished" and the Navy plane s that dropped the delayed-actio n mines to seal off the enemy's harbors all returned safely to their cnrriers. But the commander of a cruiser4 destroyer flotilla in the Tonkin Gulf. Rear Adm. Rembrandt C. Robinson. waS killed Monday night and his chief of staff and his operations officer were missing when their helicopter developed engine trouble and ~ashed a1 they wl!re trying to land aboard the cruiser Provldence. Robin son, 47, wa1 the /lr1t admlral lo die In the VJetnam war. The Navy sakl it marshaled 1 force of at least 80 ships -including five alrcra rt carriers wit!) 350-400 warplanes, four cruisers and 30 destroyers -to mine all entrances to North Vietnamese ports, to cut off the delivery of war materials through the territorial waters of North Vietnam, and to sever rail and other comniunlcatlon llnes ashore. ~fore ships were on the way, including the carrier Saratoga from the Atlantic Fleet. She was expected within a week. The 7th Air Force has more than 500 strike planea fl ying from bases ia Thailand and South Vietnam. U.S. C.Ommand spokesmen said air strikes continued over North-Ytetnam to- day. They gave no details of the day's operations but said attacks in the North nearly doubled during the past week to an average of about 200 strikes a day. American planes returned to the Hanoi area Monday for the first time in three weeks. The aerial mining of llalphong cen- tered on a narrow channel called the Canal Maritime which was dredged into the harbor. It is about a mile long, about 500 yard! wide and dredged to a depth ot about 20 feet. Other ports on the target list Incl uded Hon Gai, Cam Pha, Quang Khe and Dong Hoi. The U.S. Command declined to disclose 1 the type of mines used, but those available include acoustic m i ne 1 detonated by the noise of a ship's pro- pellers as it passes nearby, magnetic mines set off a ship's steel hull disrupt ing the mine'1 magnetic field and contact mines which detonate when hit by a ship. The mining operation began at 9 a.m. Saigon time. just as Pre_,ldent Nixon was beJ:lnnin( his televised address. Tllo President said nations shipping supplies to North Vetnam. had been notified they have three "daylight periods" to get thelr 11hips out of North Vie tnamese ports. TM notification said the mines were 1el to (See MIN ES, Pa1e JJ Oruf e \\'eajJaer Skies will be'falr excl!pt for early momink low clouds. Highs should range from 69-72 wltb the lows from 53-58. INSWE TOD/\ l' Tile mining town of ldria wlJ l shut down at the eud of 1choof, itt 120-year hi.1:tory tt1ding in co11cer11 over ecology and polht-- tion. Ste Storu, Page 12. l." ..... • _., " C.llf0ff11l1 I Mllflij1I Pttllft " c .. ,,111.-.... Halltfl.tl Ntwt • Ctml~t " Or-• Ctu•l'Y • c ... n.,.,.. " ·-1'-t• ..... Notllttt • 't.C.11 Mef'llth t•H lllltr .. I ..... • '"'' ...... " 1•1'"•1-1 " tll••l•n " ·-· 1•11 •••lt!ef • , .. "" •lffnl • WRllt W1.ii .. ... _ " Wlflltll't ,. .... f).11 ... """"' " '111111'111 ....., . • L > 2 DAILi PILOT JS ~Anti-Jet • '.pJan Bat l{ed • I :By Newport A resolution calling for Orange County supervi5()rs to close Orange C.Ounty Airport within 60 days unless airlines guarantee to cover the $30 mi!Hon homeowner1 want in noise lawsuits waa adopted by Newport.. Beach councilmen Monday night. On a 6 to o vote, with Councilman Paul Ryckoff atmaining "'ithout comment, they said they ~'ant the 1airlines to post bonds or other financial guarantees to cover the dollar amount of the suits "to protect the taxpayers or the county of Orange." Councilman J\1ilan Dostal introduced the resolution, pointing out that a Califor nia Supreme Court decision has opened the way for judgments against publicly owned airports on the g,round!I of nuisance and inconsistency in zoning. Previously, suits were a Ila wed only on the basis of hard-to-determine deprecia~ tion of property values. ''It 's a wh ole new ball game as far a:t the legal issues are concerned," Dostal observed. He pointed out that a similar threat by Los Angeles to shut do~·n its in· ternational airport is no more than an at· tempt to get the California Legislature to get cities and counties excluded Crom any res)XlnsibWty. "They hope to stampede t h e Legislature into action," Dostal sa id. He said his propoul is different in that it attempts to put the responsi bility for damages "on the polluters, themselves.'' meaning the air carriers who use the airport . • ''Let them indeJTUlify so residents won·t have to pay," Dosta l said. "If they don't do this, then the county should suspend all jet operations,'' he said. · Coun cilman Carl Kymla u pressed reluctance in casting his vole for the resolution . "l hope this resoluLion wil l not impair or be a detriment to recent discussions on getting the airport moved," he said. "Jr this action in any way speeds up actions on the part of the Superviso rs to do anything, I support it on that basis alone," observed Mayor Donald A. Mcin- nis. The resolution calls on Supervisors to require all operators of jet aircraft, as well as the federa l and state govenunent. to furnish an insurance bond, surety bond or secured in· demnificalion agreement, with the county as beneficiary, in an "amount adequate to reimburse the county for any amounts l\'hich it finds necessary to expend to compensate citizens for damages caused by the <lperation or jet-powered aircraft at the &irport." • DA ILY ,ILOT Jtt fl Pllalt ACTION, ACTION, ACTION AT RENAISSANCE FAIRE Janice HaWo rth, Center, Richard Conaway, Keefe Connor' San Joaquin Schoolmen Study Recommendations Review of recommendations made by the district task force on facilities plan- ning will be co mbined with the fir st look at next year's budget during a special meetinp; of the San Joaquin Elementary School District Board of Trustees tonight. Nelvport Ur ges New Reroutin2 L ' ' For Freewa y Newport Beach t\1a yor Donald A. Mcin- nis wants the Newport Freeway lo con1c to an end -on the Coast lligh\\lay in Huntingt<>n Beach. The work session will begin at 7:30 p.m. in the multipurpose room of La Paz Intermediate School in Mission Viejo. Recommendations to be discussed by members or the tnsk force and the board include: -Est ablishment of a central clearing house as a source of construction in- formation. -Encouragement of preferential treat- ment for -cooperating developers by plan- ning agencies_ -Changes in board philosophy of con- struction and housing covering possible cOre and partia l schools. portables and leasing on developers' sites. -Addilional tax overrides to finance ton struction. -t<.1odular construction concepts and !heir pl ace in district plans. _ ~ Dieter Workshop Slated Tonight At Viejo Hospital Agreeing with lhe idea, Newpor.t coun- cilmen Monday night voted to send a representative to the ?11ay 18 meeting of the California llighway Commission to suggest it. The council turned dO\\'n a State Public \Vorks Department request to forestall a decision on proposed condominiun1s in the present path of the route. con- ditionally approving the 494-unit Nev.'port -Development of a fast growth school district committee for the exchange of ideas and as a resource to the state legislature in C<>ntinuing "catch up" ef- forts. -Specific legislation fron1 s ta t e Senator Denni s Carpenter's and other legislators' offices. . . -Planning agency actions lo control proposed dc\"eloprnent and p r o v id e <·lass rooms throug h restrictions or re- r1u .rc1nent :1. , Loretta Thurnlan, chief dietician at Mission Viejo Community Hospital, will conduct a dieter's workshop tonight at 7 o'clock in the hospital lecture room. Reservations are requested for the free seminar, presented as part of the hospital's celebration of National Hospital \Veek . Wednesday night. Joyce M 11 1 er , supervisor of pediatrics. 1vill speak on child care and Thursday night. Sam Kossack, chief <lf physical therapy, will lecture on rehabil itat ion. Both talks are at 7 p.m. Daily tours of lhe hospital at 27802 Puerta Real take place from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. thi s 1veck. Free blood tests u•ill be given daily throu gh Saturday from I p.m. to 4 p.m. and from 7 p.111. to 9 p.m. Participants "·ill receive emergency blood-type cards. The ~1ission Viejo Community Hospital Au~iliary is handling re!ervalions for all events from JO a.m. to ~ p.m. dail y at 495-4400. OIANtil COAST IS DAILY PILOT Tll' Or11191 Cot1t DAILY PILOl , whit wltlc" It camb!Md ttll Mt ... •Pr1H, 11 PUOlli.h..i bY 11>1 Or•119t (0•11 Pu~!l1Mng CamPeny. i>•~· rl!r toir;anl ••11 Pllbll~lled, Mand1y thrau~ll Fril:l1r, foor Ca111 MtlA, Mt wriorl th1dl, l-l""'lft910ft 8re~ll.Fovn111n V1llry, lt9vn• ltlcll, l•v!nt1 S1"°llblc~ 1r.C: Sin Cltmtntr/ S.n Jv•n C~111i!••"P· 4 1i1'Ullt rr9•on11 ..,,,Jo" 11 ~Ulll•lllfd S~turn~,, end S..nc11v1. fl>lt 1Wlnc•1MI p11bh1~i<>Q pltn1 ii •I l)O Wr1t llty S1rftl, Ca•!t Mn~. C•liia1nl1, •112,. l!o b1rt N. Wttd P•t1od1n1 ,,,., P~nh1hrr J1ck R. C11rl1v Vitr P•r1 '""' «nd CicMr•I f,,•nagu Thom11 k11vil Eaitor Tl!ol'!l11 A. Mvrpl!ine M ll\f9i119 E1t1!f>f Ch1rl11 H. LD01 , Rich,,; P. N1U "'n•111n1 MAneQ!t19 Eallor• Offk" C"o1l1 Mt1.1 : l.JO WI" It~ S!rH1 ,,.tw'llO'I lfMll! lJ1J NtWllOrt 8ou1t.,.1ro LI,,_ BMtll: m Fa•r11 "'"ff>llt Hvnll"ftoll lltt Cll· 1111! Bttch 5aoll1v111t S... CJ-11: JllS Hortt! El C11"""-Rt•I 1.i., ... f714 1 '41-4J11 Cl..,fffe4 A#Mrtbllf 642·J671 S.1 ci....,. Alf O.p•""'8M1: ,,..,.._ 4f1·4410 c'"""''· irn. °''"" c:11ll l'\IOl!lfl'"' c~nw. ,,., """" 1fotf1n, lll11Slr111trt1, ftltwi... ""''.... • ........ .,, .. _" llf'rtln '""r M ·~fd W1tl'IOlll *'"''-1 Mr• """'*' ., CWYfW!t ...,,.,., ~ (~ ... ,... .... .,. C..tt "'"'· ~'"""'-. JWMT,..,;.n ""' u"'ltr n.u -"'''' ., -11 ..,,,, "*'It'll~, tnllillO' ... IMllMI GM IMnUll\', 1 • Crest project unanimously. . The request triggered f\·lclnnis ' pro- posal, however. The Newport Free11'ay is no\v planned to terminate at either the Pacific Coast Free\vay -if there ever is one -or at West Coast llighway at the Bal~a Boulevard-Superior Avenue intersection in Newport. • "We ought to offer a reasonable alternative .'' Mcinn is observed , ;ind then be made his. "Bring. the free.v.•ay down Su1wrior Avenue fas planned no111 ) to the bluffs then swing it 1vest 1 behind Ncv.•port Shores! and connect it v.•ilh the Coast Highv.'ay in Huntington Beach.·· J\·lclnnis said Huntington Deal'h of- ficials have voiced no objections to such a proposal. Huntington Beach l\layor Al Coen t.'Ould not be reached for co1n1nent on the pro- posal thts morning. l\fclnnis said the re-routing would preserve the opportunily for a futu re marina west of Nev.·porl Shores. Cl1arles Pearson, County Lead er, Succumbs at 73 Charles A. Pe:irson. 73, a mc111bcr or the Local Agency f'ormn lion Comrnission and ;i c!1reclor of the r.letrOp()litnn \\'atcr !Jisiricl. died ~londny 11ft c1· a brief illness. Pearson y.·as knO\\'n to lhousands as "'.\Ir. Ana heim.'' He u·as a cl!y coun- cHntan for 25 years from 1935 lo 1900 and mayor of the city fot the Inst 19 years or hi~ 1ern1s in office. .. Pearson also was a founding 'member of the Anaheim l>lanning Commission In 1927 and was on tht firSt board or the l\1etropolit:n 'V.ater District and the first organization commission of the Local Agency gro_up. He founded and ~·as owner of Anaheim Truck and Transfer Company. !·le "'as also past pteside.nl or the California League or Cities and of the Associ ated Chambers of Co1nmcrcc of Orange Coun-ty. Jn 1956 Pearson 'i''as named ··~1an of the Year" by !he Orange County Press Club. In 1962 Anaheim City Park on lta rbor &ulevard at Lem9n Street was renamed in his honor·~ Charles A. Pearson Park . Pearso,,.fs survived by his widow . Sara Faye. of lhe fa mily home. 685 N. lrelena, St .. Anaheim and a son. James, funeral arran;ements art prn~ng . The board also will get its first look at next year's budget. !lousing children will be a major expense in the budget, particularly if the boa rd decides to lease enough port ables lo avoid do u b 1 e sessi ons. Voters appro1·cd a 73-ccnt tax override thls ve.ir but !he board has pledged to use Only 25 cents of it this year. Farmers Pi cket Cou11t y Offices · t<.lore than 50 pickets marched in front <1f the Orange County Fann Bureau of- fices today in a nation"·ide protest by Cesar Chavez's United Fann \Vorkers t.:nion. A spokesman for the local pickets u·ho are ma rching at 1916 \V. ChapmAn Ave., Orange, said their protest against the farm bureaus was Because "its leaders are illegally using their organization to t-rush the aspirations of Anterica's n11;:rant farin ,,·orkers."' He added, ''The farrn burea u is a strike-breaker because il organizes com- pnny union s, it is racist in its policies and brc3ks the la1v by using tax exempt n1oney to attack the workers· union.·· The picket s<iid th e On(' dny prot('st was being carrit!d out at 1nore than 100 farm bureau offices in 34 slates. PRESS CLA SS SIGNU PS SET Signups have started for a series of plaot tours and "hO""IO" sessio ns for area club presidents and press chairmen Inte rested in having their club news pt1blished in !he DAILY PILOT. For information on how to make a reservation !or your club officers. stt the box published in the women's section to- day. It's on Page 14. lJayaka\\'a to Stay On • SAN FRANCISCO (UPI ) -Dr. S. I. Hayakawa, president of San Francl!co Stat• Colleg•. denied Monday th•L h• plan.s to re-sign this year. He tenned "nonstnse" published reports that he wu qWtting a.t the end .of the fall semester and had sel~cted Doo Carrlty, a.cadtmJc afl~Jrs ''Ice pre5(dent, as hiJ suceusor. • Renaissan~e Faire to Open Un.iversity Higli Sponsors Real 14tli Ce1itury Fun ... Step back in time and take a painless history lesson on the 14th and 15th cen- turies in Europe-~·Hh students !ron1 Unlveri11ty Hjgh School Saturday fro1n noon to dusk. 'l'hc message 1\•ill be entertalnment and as authentic as possible. say spo kesmen, during the high school's second annual Renaissance Faire. Beginning with the Call of the faire and the entry of the players at 12:30 p.m., the faire will feature continuous entertainment throughout lhe d,ay. Students will perform in Shakespearean repertory theater, mime t h e a t e r , madrigal singing, story theater, dances rrot11 Page 1 BUDGET ••• $2.11) comes f r o m voter-approved restrictive taxes for retirement funds, annuities and community services. The budget estimates an income o! $11.1 million, with $654,018 of that to be placed in reserves. Zogg expects a 10 percent increase •in enrollment next year. The largest estimated expendil"1fe, $7,134,397, is for salaries and textbooks, about $900,000 more than this year. The district expects to add six counselors, a speech therapist, a psychologist and an assistant principal, the latter at Mission Viejo High School. An additional $45,000 has been alloted for leasing portable classrooms , the bulk or which will go to Mission Viejo High School. Misskln Viejo and University High Schools, along wi th Foothill in Santa Ana, are scheduled to sh8.re a proposed $3,750 for a ph<ltography program. The largest new expenditure proposed at University High School in Jrvine is $117,000 for tennis court and handball courts. Under the working budget, University ls also in line for $3,200 for additional in· structional materials. Mission Viejo is listed as possibly receiving $6,400 more for textbooks . There are also provisions for additional clerical and custodia1 staff at all six of the district's schools. Any salary increases for certificated and classified personnel have not been in- cluded in the budget. 'I'bey are currently being negotiated in the meet and confer process. Zogg said if increases were set. they could possibly be taken out of the ending reserves of $654,018. Trustees said they would have a study session on the budget sometime in June. From Page I CHARGES .•. moves against Hanoi's shipping lanes to aHect the battle in South Vietnam durin g the next three weeks. However. he said there should be a battlefield impac t beyond that point. Kissinger said Nixon reached his decisions "with enormous pain and great reluctance." He pictured his 01\·n then-secret i\tay 2 meeting in Paris with Hanoi 's Le Due Tho as having played an important part in setting the stage for the moves Nixon announced Monday night. Six months had been spent arranging the Paris conference, he reported. But he said that his assurances to Le Due Tho that the United States is willing to expJore "every conceivable approach" toward peace were met by a re statement of a standard Hanoi line. He said: "What we heard could have been clipped from a newspaper and sent to us through the mail." and as musicians. A group rrom UC Irvine wUJ play re<:ordcrs and off-campus musicians called ttie Brass Tower wlU play. With the help of so me tree!. oranges and bales of hay donated by_ the Irvine Company and of costumed students, the field adjacent to Culver Drive "'ill huvc "faire " atmosphere. said Ginger Gooch of the Parent-F'1:1culty and Friends Organiza tion, sponsers. , Admission is 2S cents in costume and SO cents out of costume. Visitors won't go hungry \vhi!e 11•at(·h· ing the shows. Booth s featurin g ske\\'ered meat , scones, bread, c.heesc and lemonade v.•ill abound. And faire-goers can &eek their pleasure and spend their money at the paly1 reader's magician's or klle-1naker s o!"'"• nt booth~ stlwing crnfls and 1vares of art and v.·oodsh·" students. Enterta!n111ent will be interrupted only briefly v.•hen the Queen and her ~ourt enter at 1:45 p.m. for a short procession. l\Irs. Gooch said tti(' f;iire is for the "coinmunity as \l"l'll as the students." The Prrb, f\lr~. Gooch :;.1id, has re<"ei ved both n1u1t•rial and donolions o( help from area bui lders. including Lil· tlebrook and Anderson, Donald L. B~en Co .. Levitt and Sons, Richard B. Smith, Henry B. \\resseln. Klein Construction. Stanley c_ Sch~·arlz and Helst rom and Regan Construction. ' Coi111~il May Put Policy . . On Parl{ to Resiclent Vote Irvine City Councilmen tonight will consider setting a condition on the Bren Company, developers of G r e e n t r e e liomes. requir ing a vote of homrowners to determ ine if the tract's proposed 5- acre park sbould be public or private. Monday night the council heard from a handful of Greentree residents. Most favored city acceptance and maintenance of the proposed park. \Yhile only five or six persons spoke, about 100 persons filled the council chambers in lrvine ToY"n Center. Deputy City Attorney Bud Fish presented several options open lo the city regarding the neighborhood park. Among these were : -Leave the developer-improved park Jn private ov.•nership by refusing to ac- cept the Bren firm 's <lffer of dedica tion to the city. -Accept dedication or the park and pay for maintenance from the city's general fund -tax, income. -Form a maintenance district under provisions or the 1911 Act to !:ipread maintenance costs among adjacent residents who n1ight use the park. -Request the developer to submit an agreement for private maintenance of the developed park and also consider the formation of a maintenance district. Councilmen asked the cily attorney, however. to draft a condition to be added to the sulxlivision extension. Both the hearing on the 330-home tract and the ne\v condition consideration will be part or tonight's meeting at 7;30 o'clock in city ha!!. If the new condition is placed on the subdivision approval, the Bren firm \VOLtld be requlred to set up a vote o( homeo1\•ners. If at least 75 percent favor a private park, Bren n·ould assist homeowners in setting up a community association to ma intain the park. If less than 75 percent of tre Greentree residents desire a private park, the city v.·ould then accept the deed and maintain the ne ighborhood park as a public park. Costs or private maintenance by a com- munity association amount to $3.49 a month for each home in the Greentree tract, including an amount lo cover prop- erty taxes the privately 011·11cd, five-acre park \\'Ould generate. \Vere the city to set up a maintenance district in Greent ree to keep up the fully in1proved park "·hich Bren will deed the cilv. homeowner~ each \Yould pay $2 .66 a mOn1h. As a public park. the property \vould not be subject to property taxes. Councilman Gabrielle Pryor o f University Park today obse rved the coun- cil action will not set "city policy " on the public versus private parks issue. as some had suggested n·ould be necessary in the Greentree case. "\Ve've decided to Jet the people decide for themselves "'hether or not they v.•ant a private park." "frs Pryor sai~. Either \\"BY she no/ed. the residents or the area who'use the park will pay for it -throug h community association dues or by n1aintenance district taxes. Fro111 rage l BIKE PATHS • • • spelling oul rules for bike safety and re· quiring registration of bicycles. -Coordina tion of trail constructi<>n ·witil the county, neighboring cities, UCl and the lrvine Company as well as build· ers and community assoCiatlor:is. -Reservation by the city of some or the state gasoline -highway -tat funds , settil1g fees for bicyclists and seeking state or federal matching funds for bike trail development. The bike trails recommendations top a lengthy agenda which faces Irvine coun· cilmen tonight. Other fIUllters to be considered ifl.. elude : -Considerati<ln of an appeal by the Larwin Company of the planning com- mission·s denial of a zone change for a 34-acre parcel northeast of Walnut Avenue in central Irvine. -Continuation of the hearing on the subdivisi<>n extension asked by the Donald Bren Company for their further development of Greentree J~ om es. southeast of Culver Drive and Walnut Avenue in central Irvine. -Adoption of an urgency ordinance setting "'all and streelscape standards for the city. -Consideration of the final tract map -for 14 additional single-family home Jots in President Homes. Turtle Rock. -Action on the planning commission's recommendation to rezone to agricultural use certain properties lying north of ~foulton Parkway and launch a 1tudy lead ing to a policy plan or development for the central Irvine area. Fro111 rage l MINES .... activate automatically at 3 a.m. PDT Thursday. President Nguyen Van Thieu welcomed the U.S. mining of North Vietnamese ports and predicted that South Viet· namese forces will recapture some ter• ritory lost to enemy forces in the current offensive. In a speech on national radio and le!evision tonight, Thieu called Pres.i dent Nixon's announcement ''a strong decision to show the determination of the United States to help the South Vietnamese peo- JJe fight communism ." SERVICE ... How Much Is It Worth? f ' In the carpet busi ness sometime s its worth EVERYTHING! Hardly a day goes by that we don't get a ca ll regarding another company's! poor installation. Occasionally the damage res ulting from poorly sewn seam s or taped seams i~ not repairable. Then the value of the inves tmen t looks pale indeed! ' "· Why pay $300.00 or $1500.00 ·for ca rpeting and gam ble with tho installation 1 .JWe rn.intain all of our own crews, all taught the ONLY way to in- stall , carpeting-the RIGHT way! Thi 9re1test majority of our business is referref. There is 1 reason! ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 ~lacentla A••· COSTA MESA 646-4838 • . • • ( , I \ ( I 17 I I. b • Q ( y hi s fu c A d 7 Huntington Beaeh • Fountain Valley ' VOL 65, NO. 130, 3 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALJFOll.NIA ·-TUESDAY, MAY 9, 1972 Council \ Con·siders. City Recreation Huntington Beacb Councilmen are con- sidering the establishment cf a restric- tive recreational zOne ror all beach lands, public and private, within the city. The 1.0ne specifically covers the area seaward from Pacific Coast Highway to the mean high tide line. A first draft or the proposed zone \\•as presented to councilmen l\tonday night during an in.formal study session. Some immediate changes were sug- gested as c<>uncilmen feared parts of the ordinance left open the possibility of hotel or apartment construction along the bluff KILLED IN l~ELANO Mlrina Teach Nish Co ast T eachcr Said Vi ctim Of lris li Tliief Robert Nish, a 36-year~ld English teacher at Huntington Beach's Marina High School,-has been slain in Ireland, it was learned here ~1onday. Unconfirmed reports 'from Dublin in- dicate the Huntington Beach man, who walked \\'ilh the aid o( crutches, was killed by a thier. Dublin police reportedly have a man in custdy who was carrying Nish's wallet and traveler's checks when captured. Nish, according to school authorities, was in Ireland on a study leave from Marina High where he was known as a popular teacher. Members of Nish's family in Glendale said they had been notified of his death . but indicated they are :still unclear about the exact circumstances surrounding it. "He was a good teacher who rela ted well with students," said Marina Prill- cipat Charles Weaver. "It is a tragedy. Since he wa" <>n crutches, he wa!I defenseless.'' Weaver said Nish, a bachelor who lived at 2320 Florida Ave .. was active in the folk singing club, a poetry group, and the school's literary magazine. "He was even an assistant coach in baseball ," said Weaver. "That's pretty outstanding for a man on crutches." Nish had taught at Marina since 1963. part of the beach owned by the llun- tington Beach Company. The bluff area is currently zoned C-3 {commercial) which means a I most anything lthere is no height limit on c-3) could be built there. "l don't want anything but a parking lot on the bluffs," grumbled Jerry ritatney. Under the proposed 20ning ordinance, two types of recreation areas would be allowed. One, BRO-I (beach recreational district ), allows public swimming, public surfing, public picniking, public food Son Hears Shots concessions, public U!eguard and sanitary facilities and other public recreatl-Onal uses, but nothing else. The BRJ).1 zOne would cover the dry sand area. A BRD-Z 20ne was recommended for the bluffs area. Ccouncllmen objected to the provision in it whch allo\11s any use of the land comp3tlble with the BRO-I 20ne, subject to approval of a specific plan by the plan- ning commission. City Attorney Don Bonfa suggested that a hotel might be compatible, but that Pair Murdered On Doorstep By TERRY COVILLE Of ltl1 Diii' 1'11•1 Sllff A \Vestmins~r couple were shot to death early this morning on the doorstep or their home, apparently as they return· ed from a night ouL Police llid Frank MarCUJ ·Schiavone, 41, and his wife, Shirley Rine Schiavone, 44, were both shot in the back as they stepped through the doorway of their home at 6202 Choctaw Drive. Their bodies . were dJ:scovered by their ll·year~ld son, Steven, who was asleep in his bedroom, but woke up when he heard the shots, police said. One lleigbbor said be heard the muffled shots about 2:20 a.m., looked out his win· dow and MW a meWum built, lightly clothed man running around the corner of the Schiavone home. Police investigators said they have no theory yet on why the double murder was committed. 'The murder weapon has not been round. Schiavone, a pressman for the Long Beach Independent Press· Telegram, was shot in the back while his wife was hit in the head and in the back, by an as yet unknown caliber of bullet, police said. The couple were apparently shot from outside, police explained, and their bodies were :stretched across the open doorway wl\en Steven found them . A neighbor, Peter Garland, described the Schiavones as "good people". He said they have a son, John, in Burbank, and another son, Richard, who was wounded two weeks ago in Vietnam. Another neighbor, Joe Maher, added: "There's a numb shock when you hear something like this. The w h o I e neighborhood is worried ." Police investigators spent the day searching th e house and yard for the lveapon or weapons and any other signs or what happened. -The boy, Steven, attends Finley SchOOt in the Westminster school district. He 'Mason J udge' Dies RICHMOND, Ind. IAJ') -Kenneth ?-.1acDonald, 70, an actor who for 10 years played a judge in the "Perry Mason" television series, died Friday. telephoned police after discovering ihe bodies of his parents. The Schiavone home is in a housing tract called "Indian Village" in northmst Westminster, near the San Diego Freeway. Newport Urges New Rerouting For Freewa y Newport Beach Mayor Donald A. Mein. nis want.1 the Newport Freeway to come to ·an end -on the Coast Highway in Huntington Beach. Agreeing with the idea, Newport coun. cilmen Monday night voted to send a representative to the May 18 meeting or the California Highway Commission to suggest it. The council turned down a State Public Works Department request to forestall a decision on proposed condominiwns in the present path of the rt>ute, con· ditionally approving the 494·unit Newport Crest project unanimously. The request triggered Mcinnis' pro-- posal, however. The Newport Freeway Is now planned to terminate at either the Pacific Coast Freeway -if there ever is one -or at West Coast Highway at the Balboa Boulevard.Superior Avenue intersection in Newport. "We ought to. offer a reaso nable alternative," Mclnnis observed, and then be made his. •'Bring the freeway down Superior Avenue (u planned now) to the bluffs then awing it west (behind Newport Shores) and connect lt with the Coast Highway in Huntington Beach." Mclnnis said Huntington Beach or. ficials have voiced no objections to such a proposal. • Huntington Beach Mayor Al Coen rould not be reached for comment on the pro-- posal this morning. Mclnni.s said the re.routing would preserve the opportunity for a future marina west of Newport Shores. The condominium project, as part or appea red in a number of motion pictures IS.. FREEWAY, Pase!) ~ would be for the commissioners to decide. Bonfa said that because the Huntington Beach Company land is private, the city should not be too restrictive in its zoning, or it would risk a suit for inverse con· demnatlon (making land worthless by not allowing any reasonable use of it). "U you want it for a park, you'd better be prepared to buy it.'' he warned. The city has filed :suit to guarantee public access to the private beach, but Bonfa said that does not mean all con· struction would be stopped. LAOS Bonfa pointed to a "vista'' :section of the proposed ordinance, v.·hlch he tcrn1ed ''rather unique." ~ The ordinance (referring to the blu[f:ii) states there shall be 500 feet o( unobstructed vista (ground level vlev.·) for every 100 feet of obstructed vista. "That's fne \\'hen there Is one (lwner, like the lluntington Stach Comp.'lny, bot what happens if the land is sold to 30 dlf· ferent O"'ners?'' asktd llenry Duke. "That can't affect the ordinance," Bon· fa assured hin1. Bonfa also pointed out that if the state passes a coastal control zone, it might, or CHI NA 0 100 MIL(S U'I Ntwtmt• MAP INDICATES SEA AND RAIL LI NKS ORDERED CUT President Mov11 to Hilt North Vietnam Wa r Suppll11 Nixon Still Plans Moscow Summit, l\.iss inger Says WASHINGTON (AP) -Dr. Henry A. Kissinger said today President Nixon realizes his latest Vietnam moves "w111 create short-term difficulties for Soviet leaders" but fully hopes to proceed with MosC<Jw summit talks May 22. Kissinger, the President's assistant for national security affairs, .said the United States received no indication from Moscow as to whether the Soviets will want to proceed with tbe sum mit. He said "It will probably be a day <>r so'' before fonnal reaction is received . While sayig&:.Jiixon's attempt to block receipt of Soviet war supplies to North Vietnamese ports presents ~1oscow With difficulties, Kissinger said the Soviet.1 "permitted a situation· that posed mas- sive difficulties for us." TheJresidentia l aide, who repeatedly restat an American willingness to resume public or private peace talks, told a news conference the Nixon ad· ministration "perhaps underestimated the massive influx of offeMi ve weapons. Kissinger argued that the Soviet anns shipments tipped the military balance In Indochina Jn favor of Hanoi's forces. "Responding to questions, Klssinger said the Nixon movea involve "aome risk." He added : "The judgment was that It did not in· volve afn unaceeptable risk." But he conceded that only events will prove whether the presidential strategy will work. • Kissinger said he would not expect the moves against llan<>l '1 1hlpping lanes to affect the battle in South Vietnam dur ing the next three weeks. However, he said there should be a blttlefleld Impact beyond that point. Kissinger !laid Nixon reached hls decisions "with enormous pain and great reluctance.'' School Budget l\'.leet Set in Hunt~gton Discussion <>f the 1972-73 preliminary budget Is scheduled for tonight's meeting or trustees of the Huntington Beach City (elementary) School District. ~o Oil Tax J)ouhling Seen He pictured his own then·seeret ~tay 2 meeting In Paris with Hano i's Le Due Tho as having pliyed an Important part in setting ijle stage for the moves Nixon announced'Monday nlg~t. Six months bad been spent arranging the Paris conference, he reported. But he said that hiJ assurances to Le Due Tho .that the United States Is willing to explore "every conceivable approach'' toward peace were met by a re$tatemenl of a standard Hanoi line. He Sllid: A preliminary report indicate~ next year's total may be six to 10 percent higher than this year's. The meeting is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. in the library of ~r lntennedlate School. Precaution Failed City Administrator David Rowlands to. day denied that he ls recommendinR: a doubling of the Huntington Beach oil tax to h~lp balance the city budi?tt. "An increased oU tax is one of several possible metbodJ for raising more revenue," Rowlands &a.Id. "And that's all wt plan to llY to tht councn. II The city currently has a 1.5-ctntJ.per- SAN DIEGO (AP) -Tht ttplooion barTel oU laL Thtre hav• been reporu Sunday of Apollo 15 command ship ga.!: that the city administration plans to fumes occurred duriJ!g a new safety pr. recommend 1 raise in the tax to five cedure taken by the NaUooal Space cents. - Agency, a NASA spoiltsman said Mon-Rowlandl sold no figure llas betn men- day. The explosion during defuellng fn • tloned, and the oil ta1 Ls only one of hangar at North Island Naval Air Station several poglbllitles. _ 1<t1t lhrapntl·like metal through the air. He !old city COlliicUmtn Monday nigh!, -. during an informal .study session, that the budget has been balanced at about $13 million, though it lncludes several tight restrictions on some programs. ''We've pared down the budget from de1>3rtment re q u e1 ta: totalling $14.5 million," Rowlands told councilmen. "From !hat polnl you'll have 14 decide ll you want to restore some programs," He said today be would provide the couticil with 1 list of about stven or eight possible revenue ralalng sources, but would not !it recommendlng a n y particular measure, un\eM the council asked for hls recommendation. Some pos.slble sources, besides an In· cr<a>ed oU Ill, Include an lnctwe in fees charged for the use or some city fa ci lities and n modification in the cur· rent business and occupation tax. The oll tax issue has ,been a touchy one In the past, with the council flrst setting a flve-cent rate last aummer. The council a month latu cut tht tax 1n hair. At that time. Councilmen Jerry Matney, Donald 'Shlpley and Jack Creen fa vored the five-cent tax, which would have been tht highest oil production tax in the st.ate ror I city with producing wells:. Huntington Beach contain.t the fourth largest ail field in California. Rowl~;ukt a budget messagr. with all det.d!' on programs held back and pote:ntlal revenue, would be ready in about "•tti. "What "''e heard could have been cllppcd from a newspaper and sent .to U!I through the mail." LBJ Checkup Due • ' SAN ANTONIO, ~ex. (AP) -A spokesman for tl'le Brooke Army Medical Ct'nter say1 former Pre!i:ldent Lyndon B. John10n plans to enter tht. hospital brief· ly within the-next few d~s.. .Johnson'• , physician said Monday th• visit wlll be for a followup examinaUon re.lated lo his recent heart attack. The doctor 1treMed th~ rumination ii routine. - Today's Final N.Y. Stocks TEN CENTS Zones mlght no.I, pre.empt the city ordinanc<', depending on the wording In the atote law . ~1ark Porter, chalr1nan of the plnnninJ: con1miss..~ion. asked eouncilmen to "'rito lists for hiln suggesting what ly~ of con1· rner<'ia l use~ on the bluffs the y mi.:ht t'onsider C'01npntible with the rest ot the bea<'h zone. ~ialnry quickly sc ribbled out a ll('llr whi ch s<1id !\fmp\y: "parking." Bonf:i was askt'd to reworK th ti ordinnnce, perhaps tightening the pottn· tial use :;ectlon on the bluffs, and sub1n 1t it to the planning comrnission. 60 Ve ss el s, 350 Planes Take Part SAIGON (AP) -The biggest U.S. air and naval task force ever assembled In Vietnam began mining the •~ntrances to Haiphong and other North Vielnamese ports today and heavily bombarded rail roads and highways in North Viet· nam. The U.S. Command reported one North RELATED STORIES PAGES 3 AND '4 TODAY Vietnamese MIG jet shot down durlnR the mining oPeratkln, the sevent h MIG reported downed in four days. The command said the initial phases of the blockade announced hy President Nixon Monday ni ght "have been lJUC· cessfully accomplished" and tbe Navy planes that dropped the delayed-action mines to seal ofr the enemy's harbors all returned aafely to their carriers. But the commander of a cruiser· destroyer fiotilla in the Tonkin Gull, Rear Adm. Rembrandt C. Robinson , was killed Monday night and his chief or staff and his operations offlcer were missing when their helicopter developed engine trouble and crashed as they were trying to land aboard the cruiser Providence. Robinson, 47, was the first adm1ral to die in the Vietnam war. The Navy said 1t marshaled a force of at least 60 ships -including five aircraft carriers with 350-400 warplanes, four cruiser• and 30 de stroyers -to mine all entrances to North Vielnamese port.!1, to cut off the delivery of war materi;ds through the territorlal waters of North Vietnam, and to sever rail and other commu~ication lines ashore. More ·ablps were on the way, including the carrier Saratoga from the Atlantic Fleet. She was expected within a wetk. The 7th Air Force has more than 500 strike planes flying from bases lD Thailand and South Vietnam. U.S. Command spokesmen said air strikes contlnued over North Vietnam to- day. They gave no details of the day's operations but said at ta cks in the North nearly doubled during the past week to an average of abOut 200 strikes a day. American planes returned t<> the Jianol area J\.1onday !or the tlrst time in thrtt weeks. The aerial mining of Haiphong cen· (See: MINES, Page 21 Oraage Weac•er Skies wilJ be fair except for early morning low clouds. Fllghs should range from 69-72 with the Jo~·• from 5.'J..~. INSmE TODAY Tltt minfno town nf l<lrin wlll sl1ut down at the 1111d of 1cl1oof, ifs 120-utar hl1tor11 end inf} '" conc11r'1 ovtr ecology and (>c)llU.- lion. Ste Stofl', Page 12. l .M. l•t• • -·ft ,. C.ll'tfll• • M11l¥1I ll''lltltil " Cl1ttlf!M Jl.)t iltt1itlltl H•wa • C-1<1 " °'"-('_,., • ,__. •• '""' . ... ,. DI•"' H•lkt• • ,,_. Mill'tltlt 1•11 1:•11 ... 1.1 , ••• • T•...,llol.,. " l'~!tf11111fft~I " T1'1t•l't-. " ,1 ... ft(t , .. 11 Wufl'llf • ,. ..... kKWf ' Wtllft W•lll ... --" • _ _., " ..... 1 .. 1• ·-..... ~ .. """' H•''" • .. z OAIL t PiLOl H -1~. M•-f. ltn Closur e .. Of Field Sugg eswd A ttlOluUon calling ·for Orange ('ounty supervisors ·10 close Orange County Airport \\•!thin 60 days unles~ airlines guarantee to cover lhe $30 milllon homeownt.rs want in noise lawsulls \\'as adopted by Newport Beach councilmen Monday night. On a 6 to 0 vote. with Councilman Paul Ryckoff abstaining without comment, they aald they want the airllne5 1o post bonds or other financial guarantees to cover tht dollar amount of the suits "to protect tile taxpayers of the county or Ora111e." Councilman Milan Dostal introduced the 'reJOlullon, pointing out that a Caliklmla Supreme Court decision bas opened the Wl\Y for judgments agall)!t publicly owned airports on the ground11 of nuisance and inconsistency In zoning. Prtvlously, suits were allowed only on the basis of hard-to-determine deprecla· lion of property values. "It's a whole new ball gnme as far as the Jegal issues are concerned,'' Dostal observed. He pointed out that a similar threat by Los Angeles to sh ut down its in- ternalional airport is no more than an at- tempt to get the California Legislature to get cities and counties excluded from any responsibility. "They hope tc> stampede t h e Lejlislature into action," Dostal said. He said his proposal is different in that it attempts to put the responsibility for damages "on the polluters, th emselves," mean ing the air carriers who use the airport. "Let them indemnify so Tesidents won't have to pay," Dostal sald. "If they don't do th is, then the county 1>hould suspend all jet operations," he said. C.Ouncihnan Carl Kymla expressed reluctance in casting his vote for the resolution. - "l hope this redtion \\'ill not impair or be a detriment to recent discussions on getting the airport moved," he said. "lf this action in any way speeds up actions on the part of the Supervisors to do anything, I support It on that basis alone," observed Mayor Donald A. Mcin- nis. The resolution calls on Supervisors to req'uire all operators of jet aircraft. as well as the federal and s t a t e .gavemment, to furnis h an ins urance bond. !urety bond or secured in- demnilicatlon agreement, with the county as t¥.npficl,ary, ,io BJI "amount. adequar,e to rei1ribur11~ the county for any amounts which it finds necessary to expend to compensate citizens for damages caused by the opera!lon of jet-powered aircraft at tht airport." Fountain Valley Boy Loses Life In Swim Pool Closed chest heart massage and mouth· to.mouth resuscitation failed to revive five-year-old Gregory Lee Boyd after he was found Monday night lying. face down at the bottom of a backyard swimming pool at his Fountain Valley home. Mo1itli 's .Draft 9,000: 1-35 WASlllNGTON (AP) -The Selective Service Sy 1 t em an-nounced l<>day It will order about 9,000 young men with lottery numbers J through 35 to report lo the Anny in June. The move Is aimed at completing a caU la~t March for 15,000 men over thHpril-May-June period, lhe dran headquarters said. Only those men with numbers 1 through lS have been taken. ~'lost of the new inductees will be re~istranta ln classes l·A and l·A·O whO were born In 1952, but ••a small number of older men also will be issued orders," the announcement said. Mrs. Postl1 Gets Okay to Change ~lea of Guilty A Huntington Beach Woman who plead. ed guilty to manslabghler 11rter coming out on the wrong end of an 11 to I hung jury in her Orange County Superior Court murder trial was allowed to cha nge her mind today. Judge Kenneth \Villiams permitted itrs. Maxine Poslh, 51, of 8352 Alvarado St., to withdraw the guilty plea she of- fered April 19. He appointed the public defender to represent her with the withdrawal of her previous attorney Leonard McBride. Judge Williams set .July 31 for Mrs. Posih's new trial date on the revived murder charges and ordered her to ap· pear May 26 for a pretrial hearing. She remains free on bail. The sli ver-hai red defendant is accused or stabbing her husband, Robert, 41, with a steak knife last June 13 following a dispu te between the couple over a Sunday dinner menu. It was alleged in her earlier trial that she rammed the knife into her husband1s chest shortly after he brou ght home ham- burgers in preference to the chicken she had ordered. POsth was dead on arrival at a local ho!pital. Mrs. POsth testified that her husband dragged her by lhe hair an the way from fler car to the living room after she at· tempted to leave the home and that she then told him : "I could kill you." She said her husband handed her the knife and told her: ''Oka)'. .. go ahead .°' Mrs. Posth , who brOke down several times in the wilness box, ·told the jury that she had no recollection of stabbing her husband. She said she believed the knife entered his chest during a struggle. Youth Seriously Hutt i11 Accident A 12·year-old lf untington Bea'ch boy \Va! serioosly injured Monday \\•hen he collided headon \\•ith a car while rid ing his bicycle on Cornerbrook Dr ive in Hun- tington Beach. In guarded condition at Pacifica Hospital is Glenn Brooks of 21032 flagerstown Circle. According to police. young Brooks 'vas struck at 8: 15 p.m. by a car driven by Rodger Ooug1as 'Vibe, 37, of 21032 Beckworth Circle, Huntinbrton Beach. Police said the boy \vas ridin~ on the left side of the street when he tried to pull around a !ruck parked on the shoulder of the street and collided wiJ.h Wibe's auto. The youngster was pronounced dead on arrival at 7 p.m. at Fountain Valley Com- munity Hospital, police said. His body was discovered by his mother nnd a babysitter in the four-foot deep portable steel and plastic pool at 11423 Delphinium Ave., police said. Efforts by the father. Gary Boyd, and the Founta in \'alley Fire Department's emergency unit produced no results, firemen said. Police "'ere uncerta in how lone-the boy's body had been in the pool. Retail Oerks Pla11 Meetin gs To Vote, Ratify Funeral arrangements are pending at the Peek Family Colonial Funeral }Jome, \\'estminster. ORAN61 COAST HI LOS ANGELES (AP ! -Southern Cali!omia retail food clerks have scheduJed meetings today to take a slrike \'Ole or to ratify a new contract, depen- ding on the outcome or a final round of negotiations. Mesa Asks More Time On Fairview By RUDI NIEDZJEI..51U Of 111• Otll't' Piiot Stilt Cos ta ~les11 l\layor Jack llammetl to- dav asked the state General Servlcc!i ··-i· Depart1ncnt to allo\11 city orticials more time to develop a plan for the acquisition ot 257-ecres of state surplus properly for Fairview Park. A 3(}.day time limit, J1ammctt said, makes jt "fiscally Impossible" to work out a purchase plan for the property behind Estancia High School in Costa Me Sa. ln a Jet ter to Lawrence Robinson. director or General Services, Hammett said, "JI we are considfring a bond elet· tion in November, we must take actions for !hat determination now. "It is obvious that it would be an im· passibility for two public entities such as the city of Costa Mesa and the County or Orange to even meet and commence the legal procedures. as well as in· tergovernmental negotiations, within the time limit •given to us by the Public Works Board." At a public hearing a week ago, the State Public Works Board delayed disjX)Sal or a 46.S..acre portion of the park site to a private developer under the con· dition that local plans to acquire the overall acreage-be presented before its June 5 meeting. · The 30-day period of grace was follO\V· ed by a demand from Robinson that Costa 11esa back its commitment to the park by agreeing to a $4 million purchase price for the properly. Hammett said that the June 5 deadline "emasculates" the j:iossibility of Costa· Mesa to complying \vith the demand , especially since no fun ds are immediately available for outright purchase. "\Ve have no objection to the general tenor of the proposal, but do object to the finality and the lime limits imposed. and also the lack of oppcirtunity to negotiate a proposition which would be of benefit to the state, county and the city of Costa ~1esa.'' Hammett said in his Jetter. Costa ~1esa city officials. who are at- tempting to acquire the site in coopera· lion with the county, have called for an emergency meeting Thursday morning with Ronald Caspers. chairman of the county Board of Supervisors, and Ken- neth Sam pson, county director of ·harbors. beaches and parks. The meeling, which will also be at- tended by Mayor Hammett and Fred Sorsabal, city manager of Costa Mesa, is expected to focus on the ultimatum and a plan to acquire the property. Meanwh ile, Assemblyman Robe rt H. Burke (R·Hunlington Beach) is pushing a bill throug h the Legislature which would allow Costa Mesa and the county to lease the propert yat a fee of $10 per acre, per year. Ho\vever, Burke said the General Services Department has made it plain that it is: against any type of lease agree- -ment and is therefore opposing the bill. Aluminum Wire Ban Respected By County Court An Orange County Su11.rior Court judge has refused to interfere'1ith the ban on aluminum wiring i1nposed by the city of llu nfington Beach. Judge Robert L. Corfman closed a hearing into Baum Electrical Company's allegations that the city ban \\'as illegal by ruling th e city Building Director Jack Cleveland had the power to refuse the Garden Grove firm 's appliratlon. Baum Electrical claimed in its V.Tit that Cle\•eland's ban went beyond the state's uniform building anrt electrical code. The firm said the city decis ion, backed up by a city council resolution, had cost them $12,500 in damages. DAILY PILOT Tflt °"'1'19• Co111 DAILY '°ILOT wlifi Wllldl 11 (Omlll11rd lh1 Ntw1-Prt11, ,, Pllblh.tltd by Ille Or111111t (Oil! Pullli1Mnt Company. StOt· ,8!t t<1lllon1 ~re 1111bll5hto. Molld1y l~rougl'I F•la•r. lor (Mii Mt~•. HtWPOfl llfl(h, ~~1mH...:tlo11 lletch/Fo11nt1 l11 V1lley, La9unt lltllfh, lrvlne1S11fodltlllck 1rid .S~n Clemen!tl s~n J u1n Ctph!r•~•-A ,/flll!t rttilon•I tdil-on 11 publllhlfd S1!urdnr1 •nd S<.1..ct1yl. It" pril'l(IOtl p111tll11'1lng Pllnl It It JJD Well &~r itrttt, (OJI• MHI, C•lltornt1, f2'1'. A spokes man fnr the AFl.rCIO Retail Clerks Union said Monday that Local TIO in L<>s Angeles, largest of the 55,0IJO.. member union, would take a st rike vote if an agreement Is not reocbed. The local's members are ready also to vote on whether to ratify any proposed c•ontract that is negoliated or lo strike if 'they reject if, he added. City officials banned !he aluminum wir- ing used by Baum after being u·arned that the material. cheaper than the tradi. tional copper wiring. represented a fire hazard. ' Robert N. W11d r rr1kltnt Ind Pwlllllher J1clt R. Curley v,l, Prnkltt11 tnd Genttr11 Mfllfr 1ttom11 Ktevil Editor lt.om11 A. M11rpt.i111 M11Mg11111 E41tor Ch1rl1t H. t.."' Ric~rd r. Nflll Attlet1111 Mlt11tirle Elthort Terry Covar, Wts.1 Or11111 (911"1y Ed1!ot' Ndti.,tH 1Mc:• OffJc• 1717S l11ch •0~1 • .,,,4 M1i/f11t Ad.lr111: r.O. loz 790, '2641 0"'9f orfk11 Lllf\lllt ll11t11• 121 f'..,nl AYltlVt: eo.11 Mn•: uo Wt11 111r Jtrttt Hrwport •••ell: ,,,,, Newport lloultYlrd ~n (1"'1tnte: as H0tll'I E.1 c.m111o "''' Tel•rlle11 (7141 64Z-4 JZ1 Cteu1tltll A4..,,11I .. ''2·1•71 '"""' ,..,. Of .... Clvlolr ~11i.. 14f.12Zt · • Cottrl'Jofll, 1'71. 0..8!'1911 CMtl 'UbllMll'll C"tmHnr, N• 1141'tlt 1to!iih, IU11ttr1tltM, ll4lt1rlll '"'"tr ,,, td.,er1lltmtflt1 l'ltrtlfl _, 1111 rtpr'lllllCM .,.1"'°"' Nt«.111 ,,.,_ '""'* 9f 'cotrrlotlt ......... ,..... ci.e. ""• N"' I f C,,t1 ~I, C.PlilmlL ~--11r Uolfr U.U ltltftlfll'rl "' -fl U.IJ IMM!ll~I 11111/lan' .....,. U-6J -lf'llr. He said six of the union's nine locals have aut horized a slrike and voting on the issue by members In Jlakersficld and ~ San Diego \\'ill ·be held over 1he \Veekend. Baum officials pointed out that they l1ad already signed a contract lo install \\'iring in a 310-home subdivision. A subslitution of copper wirii1g "·ould add costs of $~0 a house. to the firrn 's CQSts, it \\"as stated. Union officials said 1hey want wage In- creases that "·ill give Southern califomia retail clerks parity with clerks in lhe rc!t or the state. Frona Page l FREEWAY ... the conditions for its approval. hos agreed to Install pipes to bring the drainage down the bluffs and will build an exttnslon of its Internal road\\'ay lo J.lonrov la Street as a ·•rear exit." The project fronts en Superior Avcnut. which the develope r, lhe ltobe:rt H. Grant Corporation, will widen. Grocer Van Hijacked SAN DIEGO (AP):... A gunman jumped into grocer Jack SclJjndtu-.s. Vitn Mon~ day es It pulled 1Way from the curb on_ the way (o the bank, tied up Schlndtcr and escaped_ with the deposit -fl.JOO in cash and it,900'ln checkJ, police said. • City officials successfully nrgue d that the alun1inum "'iring planned by Baum becan1e unsafe because of its tendency to 1:1cparale from !he CQpper wiring used in connecting the nluminum to switches in the hon1e. The sparks generated by the separ:i.tion could very easily cause a blaze. It was stated. ....., • General Telephone Slates Open House The Inner workings of the Generel Telephone Company will be bared to Jluntington Beach resldents Thursday al ~the company's open l1ouse ceremonlt!s at their 7280 Edinger Ave. Lfaclllty. More lhan 100 operators will be on hand giving tours, explaining the equip- ment, and serving refreshments, COJTI· pony official! said, Open ho ... at tho loll ofllee will be from 1:30 p.m. to 8 p.m. Purpose ol lhe runclion I.! simply to let lhe public kn°" ,.,hut the aimpany does, an ofticial said. Va/edicloria11 Stan Peterson has been named valedictorian for the 1972 grad- uating class at Edison J-Iigh School in Huntington Beach. 'fhe son of Mr. and Mrs. Burns Peterson, 9232 Christine Drive. is a straight-A student and the school's current student body president. Fro11a Page 1 MINES ... tered on a narrow channel called the Canal 1'.larltime which was dredged into the harbor. It is about a mile long. ab:::iut 500 yards wide and dredged to a depth of about 20 feet. Other ports on the target !isl included Hon Cai, Cam Pha, Quang Khe and Dong tloi. The U.S. Command declined to di sclose the type of mines used, but those available include acoustic n1 i n e s detonated by the noise or a ship's pro- pellers as it passes nearby. magnetie mines set off a ship's steel hull disrupting the mine's magnetic field and contact mines which detonate when hit by a ship. The mining operation began at 9 a.m. Saigon time. just as President Nixon \\'as beginning his televised address. The Presidenl said nation! shipping suppLies to North Vetnam had been notified they have three "daylight periods" to get th eir ships out of North Vietnamese ports. The notification said the mines "'ere set to activate automatically at 3 a.m. PDT Thursday. President N~uyen Van Thieu welcomed the U.S. mining of North Vietnamese ports and predicted that South Viet· namese forces will recapture some ter· ritory lost to enemy forces in the current offensive. In a speech on national radio and television tonight. Thieu called President Nixon's announcement ·•a strong decision lo show the -aetermination of the United States to help the South Vietnamese ~ pie fight con1munism." He said Hanoi 's decision thus far has created 650,000 civilian refugees and 25.000 civilian casualties. Thieu said South Vietnamese forces had been forced to abandon territory in Quang Tri, Kontum and Binh Dinh pro\·· inces because of heavy enemy pressure. But he added : "\Ve will retake some territory in the coming days. " Ve will recapture Quang Tri. the city that we Jost because of the mistakes of some leaders or under hard pres sure Jrom the enemy." Hayakawa lo Stay On SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Dr. S. I. Ha yakawa, president of San Francisco State College, denied Monday that he plans to resign this year. He termed "nonsense" published r eports that he was quitting at the end of the fall semester and had selected Don Garrity, academic a!fairs vice president, as his successor. ltlajtW Cra.chdOwn • Heroin Suspects Seized • Mesa Ill Dy ARTllUR R. Vl~SEL 01 1111 01Jly Pllll S!UI Striki ng swiftly lo lnll'rcept an unex. peeled shlpmen t, Co.'lta Mesa police and federal narcotics agents claim they selz1;.'d 39 ounces of high-grade ht'roin worth 5250,000 f.1onday night and l'ilP· tured si x suspected smugglers. Investigators claim the polent opialt' was distributed to Orange County addict~ through legitimate business fronla in· eluding t"·o ~1exican cafes. the Pink Ap- ple Produce Company and a glass firm. One suspect booked into city jail early today, as a resuJt, was no stranger to the premises. He v.·on the contract in 1967 to instail jail safety glass and other Costa ?t1esa J>oJice Facility windo1vs, narcotics detec- tives noted. The arrestees taken into custody at their firms and homes about 10 p.m. \Vere schedul ed for arraignment today before a U.S. Commissioner in Los Angeles. No bail was to be set unti l they \1•ere forn1a!ty brought before the bench on charges of violating federal narcotics laws. Agents of the Federal Bul't'au of Narcot ics und Dangei'ous Drugs (BNDD) .seized sport sedans belo.1ging lo 11':e suspects in a raid at El Comedor r-.·tex- icano. a care at 11765 Edinger Ave., Fountain Valley. A truck used by Pink Apple ?roe.lure Company and allegedly used to sn1uggle the killer drug in from f\1exico \c:as also impounded as evidence. Arrestees include Albert G. Ellsworth, 44, of 9462 \Vaterfront Drive. ~lunHngton Beach: Paul E. Aragon . J6, and his nephew Armando S. Ramirez, 19, both of 8392 Danbury Circle, Hunlington Beach ; John L. De LaTorre. 24, of 11050 Centa Circle, Garden Grove; Paul Lovato, 21. of 2012 Rose Lane, Orange. and Pedro V. flernandez, 52, of 4101 Sixth St., Santa Ana. · Costa ~1esa Narcotics Detail Sgt. John llcgan S.'.lid lhe six were associated"" in several lirms. They include El Comedor Mexicana , El Valle Resta urant, 13041 Main St., Garden Grove: De Latorre Landscaping. the produce firm and American Balboa Glass Company, 1617 Placentia. Ave., Costa /\l esa. The glass firm 1s owned by Ellsworth. \\'ho employed one of the other five suspects in the police facil ity window in- stallation. "They were using these businesses as fronts," Sgt. Regan charged today . He said his men initiated the in· vestigation five months ago and included BNDD agents due to the scope of the alleged heroin smuggling and distribution ring in Orange and Los Angeles counties. ··They were dealing in 50 percent pure heroin,'' Sgt. Regan alleged, saying thjs 1s extremely potent. "It got down to where \ve were buying it by the pound.'' he added. ..The actual amount or money involved Freeway Crash Claims Driver l'aula Rose !\filler, 25, or 9320 Bird Cir- cle, Westminstt-r, lost her life early today ll'hen her eastbound car went out of con· tro l on the San Diego 1'"'reeway just east of Seal Beach Bqulevard. California Highway Patrol officers said the car went off the roadway, swerved back across six lanes of the freeway and smashed into the center divider. The Orange C.Ounty Coroner's Office said she suffered fatal head injuries. With J\1rs. Miller 's death, the tra!fic loll for 1972 rose lo 92 which compares to 72 at this date last year. ' is classified inrormation, but the fL'11era1 gove nunent :<!pent thousands o{ dollars.'' lhe veteran oarL'<lUcs detecllve declared. Teams inchiding Sgt. Regan, detective~ Norm Kutch and Don Casey, plus BNDD personnel carried out !he raids on tihort notice \.\.'hen notified of lln inComivg sh.ip- inenl. ··\Ve didn"l expe~t it lO go so soon ," he ren1arkt'd. ln\'estig;itors .said Hernandez. "''at armed 111ilh a revolver but made no II· tempt tr> resist \11hen placed under arrest. ··\Ve used just about every type or sophisticated detection method during th.is case, including plain old·fashio~ed leg"·ork," Sgt. Regan said in announc111g it. "Our .hellcopter played an especially big role in surveillance." Value of the 39 ounces seized ~tonday night would be about $31,200 wholesal e and up lo $250,000 after it was cut with other compounds such as mllk sugar fo r street sales. Bomb Blast Links Probed In La Habra By JACK BROBACK Of Hit O.Uy l':lklt Stllt Police Chief Lee Rivera o( La Habra said today there are persistent rumors that the bombing Mcnday which critically injured a volunteer B<lys Club_ worker of that city rTiay have been connetted with recent motorcycle gang wars in the coun· ty. But the chief added, "We have no aolid evidence to go on as yet and we can't giv,e too much credence to rumors." Ronald Beaulieu, the victim was honored by the Boys Club of La Habra as •·volunteer of the year" in 1971. He was the victim of a bombing early 1" .. fonday morning when a mercury-trig· gered pipe bomb on hls car e:ic~loded. Beaulieu lost his right hand in the ex- plosion and the arm was amputated just below the elbow during fou r hours of surgery at La Habra Community Hospital. His livtr, spleen and lungs were punctured by shrapnel from the box. Chief Rivera said today that the ·U.S. Treasury Department's agent'.s and the Orange County sheriff's department bomb $quad are aid ing La Habra police in the investigation1 A treasury agent said the .bomb was not similar to the one "'hirh last mo11th crHica)Jy injured Wayne D. Timms, a 27~ year-ol~ leader in.the Seekers cy~le club. That bombing occurred when Timms started his pickup truck in the early morning hours . Ho\\'ever. the agent said, "We're not ruling out a possible connection bet.,..•een the two lx>mbings." ~videnre from the La Habra explosion has been sent to the Treasury Depart- ment laboratories in \\1ashington, D.C. for analysis. The two bombings followed a con- tinuing battle involving lv;'O n101orcycle gangs, the Seekers and lhe Hangmen. Last Feb. 20, a barrage of rifle at an Anaheim service station wounded the former president of the Seekers and two others including a 13-year-old El Toro boy. Just one u·eek later, Terry Powell, 24, a member of the Hangmen was kllled by two shotgun blasts as he rode his mo- torcycle on the Fairview Street offramp of the Garden Grove Freeway. SERVICE ... How Mucl1 Is It Worth? In the carpet business sometimes ih worth EVERYTHING! Hardly a day goes by that we don't get a call regarding another company's poor instillation. Occasionally the damage resulting from poorly sewn seams or taped seams is not repairable. ~ Then the value of the investment looks pale indeed! Why pay $300.00 or $1500.00 for carpeting and gamble with the installation? We ma intain all of our own crews, all taught the ONLY way to in- stall carpeting-the RIGHT way! ' Tho greatest majority of our business i1 referrel. There is • reason! ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placentia A vt. COST A MESA 646-4838 • ' ' I Protes ts Sparked On Caµipus By n, _Asl10e~ttd Pre11 • Antiwar demons1r1tion1 e r u p t e d throughout Calirornia as students and others protested President N i x o n ' 1 mining al North Vietnamese ports. Most demonstrations were peaceful but violentt erupttd in the. city of Berkeley and the University of California camptU there. In San Jose, police said two fires, ap- parently caused by incendiary devices, caused $200.000 damage early today at an Anny reserve station and $1,000 damage to a Navy-Mari ne training center. At Berkeley, six persons were arrested l\1onday night after about 500 antiwar demonstrators overturntd and set fire to an empty poliCf: car during a torchlight parade and ripped down an eight-foot· high chain-link fence around the former "People 's Park," focw of a 1969 universi- ty disturbance. After destroying the fence, about 350 of tilt group headed back toward the cam- pus overturning mailboxe!, telephone booths .and new sst.ands and smashing windows along the way. At least IO law enforcement cfficers 1uffered miner injurie!, police said. Officers used shotgun! to fire riccchet rcunds cf "silly putty" into the pavement, which then bclunced into prctesters, sting- ing but not penelrating the rlesh . Tear gas ~·as used once to disperse a group, police said . In Santa Barbara, an eslimated 1,500 persons marched from the student com- munity or Isla Vista. adjacent to UC San- ta Barbara. to U.S. IOI, where they blocked traffic for more than lhrtt hours ear.ly today as a 11ymbol cf thtir o~ position to the President's announcement of the mining. There were no arrests. police said. Sheriff's deputies rerouted traffic. After t"·o hours, some of the demonstrator., marched to the univer!ily campu!, smashing at least SO windows in an industrial park in nearby Goleta, a sheriff's sergeant said. The demonstrators blocking the hirhway iefL. about 3 a.m. At Stanford University, some 200 students marched to the campus home of President Richard Lyman where they were met by five riot-geared sheriff's deouties. A spokesman wa!I allowed to bring the group's charges of university complicity in the war to Lyman. He reportedly had no comment. The street fighting in Berkeley con- tinued for 1wo hours. with police cars - many with brcken windows -charging knots of demon.strator1. Pol ice informaHon officer Richard Berger 1aid that at 1rouod f a.m. police btgan making arrests when it was clear some groups would not be broken up. Thost arrested were booked for in- vestigation of rioting, mal icious damage or resisting arrest. he said . . ' UPI Ttltil'httoi BERKELEY PROTEST OF PRESIDENT NIXON'S BLOCKADE OF NORTH VIETNAM Pol ice Car Burn~d During Demonstr1tion by 500; Some W1r1 Arr111t1d ~---------~ Cong Denounce 'Ultimatum,' Sa y Tl1 ey Won't Quit PARIS •!AP ) -The Viet Cong accused President Nixon loday cf laying down an ultima1um to the Vietnamese people. but said that they will "never give up as long as they ha ve not t'lalized their sacred ob- jectives.'' In its first comme nt on Nixon's decision to blockade North Vietnam's ports, the Viet Cong delegation to 1he Paris peace talks called on Nixon to ''im- mediately ha lt all of his acts of war . , , and engage in serious negotiations. " ... Mr. Nixon giv~s an ult imatum lo the Vietnamese people to oblige them to capitulate," the statement ~ntinued. "He tries to humiliate a people which i!\ struggling ror its independence and freedom, and which never has done harm to the Ameriean people. ;.Oearly. the Nixon administration acls like a barbarous aggressor and like an in- ternational gendarme, defying all the standards of intematicnal law, and all in- ternaticnal conven licns, as well as all moral principles." The statement added that "the Nixon administration is badly mistaken in believing that threats. \•iolence and deceitful maneuvers will subjugate the Vietnamese people." Tass Refers to Move As 'Aggressi ve Acts' MOSCOW (AP ) ....... Tass accused Presi- dent Nixon today of "naked aggressive acts" and violating internat ional law in his actions against North Vietnam -and conceivably against Soviet shipping. The Soviet news agency Ta~!\ di.~rributed a six-paragraph di~pa tch under a \Vashington dateline, about 12 hours after Nixon's announcement of plans to block the approaches to North Vietnamese ports. Tass said that in addition to mining •port ent rances, Nixon gave orders for 'Ameriean armed forces to strike blov"s on internal waters, rails and roads'' in North Vietnam. It said "Nixon has tried lo )uslify these naked aggressive acts. \vhich me.11n an aggravation of .American inlerference in Vietnam and lhe viol11tion of ~rms of international Jaw. as Sa\'ing the lives of 60.000 American soldiers.'' Tass said Nixon also blamed "a Com- munist threat to South Vietnam" for the actions. adding such a threat "is used bv American propaganda to justify the actS cf escalation of war against the Vietnam people." Tass said Nixon promised the United Slates wants to end the war and take its troops home , "but the practical steps as well as the measure announced speak to the contrary." The dispatch notea !he President's assurances that his decision,, were not aimed at any third country. While the President poinledly directed his remarks to the Soviet Union, Tass made no men- tion of speci fic references to the Soviet Un ion in the speech. The Tass report contained no indication of "hfll the Soviet response \\'Ould be to the direct challenge posed 10 the Kremlin by Nixon 's decisions. There was no immediate response from Con1munist China or North Korea. Their broadcasts did not mention Nixon's move. The Soviet leaders apparently must ha lt shipments cf war material to Hanoi or risk ha ving their ships sunk by the mines U.S. planes are planting at the en· trances to North Vietnam 's ports. They also must decide whether they can still be host to Nixon for the summit meeting both governments want, a visit two weeks a"'ay. The president made his announcement on a Soviet national holiday at 4 a.m. t\1osco1v lin1e and no Word on it appeared in the papers. The papers instead were full of Victory f)ay proclamations, including an order of the day by Marshal Andrei A. Gr~hko. the defense minister, on the "constant combat readiness " of Soviet -and Warsaw Pact forces. H 2 Pirates Killed Israeli Troops End Hi jacking • ~ I TEL. AVIV (AP! -Israeli army troops t()Ci11y killed two Arab hijackers. captured two others and released 97 perS<lns on a Bel~ian jetliner the 1errorish1 threatened to blow up. The pas:riengers esca~ minutes 11frer l\\"O men climbed onto the \\"ing of the plane and forced lhe Pmergency doors open. ··11 is all ovr r now," s;aid an army spokesma n. 21 hours aflPr the plantt land- ed at Tel A1•iv International Airport. Both of the dead guerrillas were men \\•earing wigs as disguises. The captured hij11ckeric "'ere \\'Omen, one of "'horn -was shot in the chest and seriously wounded. Capt. Reginald \..evy. the pilol . climbed out of the bullet-scarred jetliner with his hands covrrtd in blood . But he smiled and apparently \\'AS not injured. ··Thanks very mu ch. It 's a lovely da y," ht> told Offense Minister r..toshe Dayan . "'ho was s!anding beside !he plane with Chief or S111ff Lt. Gen . Da vid Elazar and four general~. Officers said 18 l!!raell soldiers dressed in white Sabena overalls burs t through the doors of the pliine and opened fire on the guerrillas. ''Lie dO\\'n! Lie down ! EverY1hing is 1111 right" !he sold iers yelled to passengers as they fired al the hijackers. One bullet hit the terrorisl leadt:r bet\veen lhe eyes. He ident ified himself as Capt. Raf at. The two bodies were laid on the plane's wing . Their blood was splashed all over the passenger section . The . released passengers laughed, smiled anti kissed each other. then clin1bed inlo buses to be taken to the airpor t building. Shoutii of joy rang through Knesstt - !he Israeli parliRment -when Premier C'.olda Meir and the government received Wflrd that the troops had taken the plane. The hijackers took control of the Sa· bena aircraft Monday after a stop in Vienna on a flight from Brussell! to Ttl Aviv. When it landed 11 Tel Aviv they threatened to blow up the plane and the 87 passengers and 10 crewmen aboard upnless the Israeli government releaRd Arab guerrillas. The hijackers were armed "'ilh guns, grenades and explosiveii;. Levy, ;illo"·ed to leave the pl11nt> once for negotiation~. told newsn1en he was certain the gunmen would carry out their lhreal "unless they gel ~·hat they w;int." • Dayan and Transport MinislP.r Shimon Perez spent a sleepless night at the airport as representative of the Intern•· Uonal Red Cross tried to negotiate. Figures on the number of guerrillas the hijackers wanted released ranged from 100 to 300. They wanted them put on the plane .and flown to Cairo. Today, the Israeli atate radlo reported the government rejected the demands. The slate radio said Israeli negotialcrl offered the four hijackers safe passage to another country if they released the passengers and crev.'. Ch ina Claims 2 Ships Hit By A rrie1·ica11s TOKYO (AP l -T"·n Chinese ships anchored 1n North Vietnames.e walerl v.·ert> "brazenly and repeatedly attacked'' by U.S. planes and ~·arshi~ o"er the "'eekend . Peking said in a broadcas.t ear· ly \Vt'dnesday. The broad cast. carryinir a statement by !hf' Chinese Foreign ~linislry , said some Chinese cre\\' members and Vietnamese ci\'ili an5 aboard the ships werr wounded and both ships were seriou sly damaged. II sa id the ships were anchored off Non N~u Island . Nghe An Province. The statement said the mcident "const ilutes a gra~e provocation against the Chinese people" and added : "The U.S. government must immediately stop irs art of provocat ion of attacking Chinese merchant ships and prev~t the recurrenee of similar I nc id en t 1. Otherwise. it must bear full responsibility for all the grave consequences arising therefrom.'' The Chinese new s agency said three U.S. \\'ar ships fired "'many shells" on lhe two ve ssels the evening of May~=' The following day around noon "many U.S. aircraft bombed and strafed" ~ ship s. The news agency added the ships were aga in attacked by "many" U.S. planes the afternoon of May 8. PR ESS CLASS SlG NU PS SE T Signups have .started for • 1er1es cf plan\ tours and "how-lo"' sessions for area club presidents and pre&s cha.lrmen intereated in having tlteir clu b at wl published in the DAILY PILOT. For Information on how to mike a reservation for your club offlcer1, .e. the box published ln the women'1 aection to- day. It'~ on Page 14. Telegraph and Shattuck A venues were 1ittered with plate glass from shattered !lore windows. Trash containers cf all gizes were overturned and their contents 11et on firt. Fire truck!! threaded the ir way among demonstrators and police cars to put out &mall blazes. It said the United States must resp<ind to the Communist peace plan calling !or conditional withdrawal of American troops, the resignation of President Nguyen Van Thieu and formation of a coalition government. "This is the only correct way to settle the South Vietnamese problem, con- form ing to the interests ()f the Viet- namese and American people ... " the statement said. "The road toward ag- gravation of the aggression, escalation cf the war and accumu la ticn of crimes can cnly lead the United States toward more serious failu res." CONTINENTALS ... Charles Pearson, County Leader, Succumbs at 73 Charle!! A. Pearson, 73, a member of the Local Agency Formation Commission and a director of the Metropolitan Water District, died Monday after a brief illnes!I. Pearson wai; known to thousands as •·tifr. Anaheim." He "'as a city coun- cilman for 2S years from 1935 to 1960 and mayor of the city for the last 19 years of his term!! in office. Pearson al~ was a founding member of the Anaheim Planning Commission in 1927 a"hd wu on the first board of the •Metropolitan Water District and the first organization commission or the Local A~ency group. He founded and was owner of Anaheim Truck and Transfer Company. He was also · past president of the California League of Citie!I and of the Associated Chambers of Commerce of Orange Coun- ty. In 1955 Pearson was named "Man of the Year" by the Orange County Press Club. In 1962 Anaheim City Park on Harbor "Boulevard at Lemon Street wa~ renamed in his honor as Charles A. Pearson Park. Pearson is survived by hi!! widow, Sara Faye, of the family home. '85 N. Helena St., Anaheim and a son, James. Funeral arrangemenls are pending. Se nate Mo ve s To R epeal Lq w SACRAMENTO fUPI) -A bill repealing California's ne11rly cen- tury-aid law prohibltlnl( the im- porting of Chinest and Japanese women for purposts of pro!tltution his cleared tM: State Senate. St.ate Sen. Alfred-Song, author or tht bill. s11ld it would not open tht door for tht importation of pros- .tltutes from the Fir East. "It ilmply remove11 tht l11t vestige. of Oriental exclu!!lon l1w1 from our 1tatutes." he said. He said lmport111\nn nf prostitutes 1---1-I• 1JUtl1w~ -by 1ltvery-l1wa-thtt "<>llld not be affected II)' hlr legi.llation. L'Humanite. the "French Communis t party newspaper. said the mining of North Vietnam's harbors was "a new act of war whose consequences are un· predictable . Not only does it proVoke an aggravation of the connict but it threatens its extension. "Nixon criticized t.he Soviet Union for aiding the Democratic Republic of Viet- nam. This a cynical attitude coming from a man who has sent to Indochina an ex- peditionary corps supported by an enormous air and na val neet," lhe party paper said. Abandoned Auto . Ripped b y .. Bomb Orange County sheriff's ofricers are to- day investigating an explosion that destroyed an abandoned car in the San Juan Capistrano area. Officers belieye the device went off dur ing the Weekend and demol ished the vehicle which had been parked off the Ortj?ga Highway about nine miles from San Juan. Investigators said it appe11red as if the borrib had been planted in the front seat of the car by persons who may have been experimenting with explosives. Officer,. are today trying to trace the registered owner of the old auto . County Attorney Tapped for ICC? Santa Ana attorney Rodolfo Montejann has dtcllned com_me.nt on reports that ht1 is being considered for~ se&t on the · Interstate Commerce Cbmm ission, but confirmed that he i11 flying to Washington lod•y. Wire reports 1ald the 23-yet.rAJld Orange County Democrat was to Confer with White House alde.s 1bout ap- pointment to the 11·man commission. The seat Is expecttd to be vac1ted In July. Montejano currently is president of the Rancho Santi1go Community ColleKt District thlt includes Sant• An1 Junior 'College. He Jives in Santa An1 . on e11no 111~e t;",~s"h~ad.-n_o_sl'""•'"te-­ ar national pol itical expuience before. He llid ht """Id rerum by lhe end of the •ttk. with the • • • ''Golden Touch'' - • 4-Dr. SEDAN We h ave ·an outstanding Rome Of The New Car . , , "Gol,de n Touc h " MARl(IV 2-Dr. COUPE selection of these fine cars! ' . . ' Home Of The New Car • , • "Golden '.l'oull" 2S2S HA RBOR BLVD., COST~ MESA • 540-51311 r i l t • ' -- ,# r~tLV PILOT Tuesd.ty, M•Y 9, 1972 Just ~ Coasting , ~~ J Nixon Risk's 'Clierish'e'd Goals 9 ' ''· '\@ (( Mini11g of Harbor Poses Direct Challenge to Russia wilh Tom urpbine 'Other Side' Figured Wrong RA/\'00,\I TH Ol..G JITS DEPT. -You look at the im age of the. face of the television screen and abru prly you recognize that 1h1s is no longer the young congressman from \\'hit Iler. sm1hng, geJf.assured. catapulted into national prtr minence by some secret paper!' found in • pumpk in patc h. This is a tired man. a v.'orrled man, a grim President. of the United States. He v.•as the gl ib. smiling, professionally polished politician v.•ho gained his p!ace In the sun holding General Eisenhov.•er's victory hand In the air. No w th e hea vy brows are dra1,1.·n dov.'ll and creases and Jines extend from th at famous nose drawn by so many car· toon ists. And the mouth that flashed the easy smile is tt11n and set m a crooked Iii· tie line. And it is clear -as his advisers ha ve insi.s!ed in br iefing lhe press over the past few years -that in this 1A·ar, there are noy,• very fe1.1' options left open to him. And as his image flickers across your screen. he is telling you that now he is exercising some of those rema ining op- tions. He Is seft ing up a naval blockade. He is minirig Haiphong and the other North Vietnflmese harbors. He y,•ill bom b the rails that bring the y,·ar machines to the enemy. We must. he tells you, keep th e guns out. of the ha nds of the ou tla.,.,'S. HE LOOKS old and tired. But he look~ determined. Faintly, he reminds you of that young man-.who sat in the same ·seat before a similar television audience -it seems so mti ny years ago -who threw do1.1:n the t.hallenge to Soviet missile shlps and "declared we y,.·ould keep those utlimate weapon! out of Cuba '.'even if it .turns to ashes in our mouths." Another president , another time. "CLEARLY OVER the past months. tho President gave the O!her Side all the in- dicators that he was anxious to wind down this miserable \\'Sr. He "'as ma ki ng all the right pronouncements to do so. He y,·as pull ing out troops as rapidly as the was pulling Ut troops as rapidly as the traffic would bea r. He was packing his diplomatic bags for Moscow. The overtures for peace flowed thick and fast. Clearly, it gee med open season for bargains. bartering and real conciliation for peace. But somehow, you get the impression tha t the Other Side read the signposts all wrong. THEY READ it as an election year in which the President of the United Statl!s was hearing the anti-war cries all across his own land . A diff icult time fo r him in whlch he must back aY:ay from the miserable u·ar and buy peace in his time at any price. So the y pressed on southwar d. And they pushed harder than ever to pour increasing numbers of war machines into the ba ttle. And now they know that once again, as In Cuba , Korea and Berlin, they read the signposts all ~Tong. You are left wondering if the man will ever have a chance to Jet the worry lines in his face go away. If h~ will be allowed to relax at his Ca sa Pacifica and breathe the good air on this best of all possible coas ts. MAYBE HE will lose the gratitude of his Rtpubl ic . Maybe he wi ll lose the elec- tion . Or maybe , Just maybe , he will force the other side back to the bargaining table seeking meaning ful peace. Indeed . the pr ice of being President 1s high. ~Iuzzl e Loader i\feet FRlENDSHIP , Ind. (AP 1 -Ramrods and powder horns y,•ill be rn use aga in l\'hen the Natio nal Muzzle Loading Rifl e Association holds its annual spring cham- pionsh ip matches lt1ay 18-21 a t Friendship. By STEWART HESliiLEY v •1 D+•ltm1ll< "'"'"' \\'ASHl~GTON -Prl'sid,.nt :'\'1xnn, fac ed .,.,·1 th a rapidly v.·orsen in.: mt!1t11 rv s1tuat11Jn 1n Vie1n11m , has fiikf n a high risk step IA'hich pla ces 1n Jeopardy h1o; cherished "era of negotiations" v.·1th Russia. The Preside nt obviously hel1f'ves the gamble 1s y,·nrth taking -or at the ''ery Jeasl unavoi dable -()r he would not ha\·e dl!cided Ill order na\'al and air measur~s t cut off or vast l.v diminish the flov.· of So\•iet supplies lo Hanni. The pre sidential st rate~y posl's ii direct challenge t'J the So\'lel Union. "'h1ch can hardly accept lhe \"ahdtly of his measures but can dec1dP. to sidestep the issue to avoid irre para ble damage tn Sov iet-Am erican negol!ation5 on ot her iss ues. Russia could condemn Nixon's block ade as ille gal and pro\·ocatlvP. but it co uld avo id sending ve sst'IS into Ha iphong and other por ts for the time being while it decided >1•hether to dis cuss the situation . ' >1•ith ti.'ixon at the Moscow 1umrnil C'On· rerence, scheduled M1y 22. The President appea red to ~ pro- ceeding on the assumption !hat the Soviet Un ion did not con1ider Southeast As ia im- portant enoug h to permit it to jeopardize NEWS ANALYSIS con!L nued negoti ations on the big nuclear and European Issues with w h i c h \\'ashington and ~1o,,ctlW are dealing It should become apparent soon wne1her the President is right in this allsumption. Tf he is wrong, the con- sequences could be fearful. The blockade would have no effect on Hano i's military capability for a couple of mon ths , because of the time it takes for war material to flow from Haiphong and Hanoi down !he tortuous route to the three maj-Or fronts in the south. The President, in an obvious effort to 1 \ • --- ----' UPI FILE PHOTO SHOWS SHIP UNLOADING IN HAIPHONG J1paneM Newsmen Took Picture of Polish Vessel in 1967 Action Stopped Short Of Imposing Blockade By fRED S, HOffMAN AP MH1t1ry Wrll1r ?.'ASHING11)N -President Nixon told the Russians in effect they can sail fre ighters into North Vietnamese harbo rs at their own risk. But he has !topped short of declaring a blockade. usua lly Wicks .f\.~ ....... J .. i' ,,·- . ---t . i 111~ 11..i. • .... .::::: '-'-• -\ l --·-• M -::;-. -1 ~ . .,.... ·regarded as an act of war. Pen tagon spokesman Daniel Z. Henkin said the measures Nixon ordered in an effort to seal off North Vietnam from outside military aid ''is not a blockade in terms of board ing and searching ships." Instead. the U.S, Na''Y \li'ill try to plu.11 the en trances of Haiphong and at least fi \'e othe r Nort h Vietnamese ports wit h magnetic and acoustic mines dropped from carrier*based planes. Sources said the mine s are equipped "'it h delaycd·action fuses to give Com· munist and other skip pers three days to get out of porl, a pe riod of grace in- dicated in Nixon"s speech Monday night. At last re port. there were :16 ships in Hai phong Harbor. aboul triple tlie numher there before the North Viet· namese offe nsi\'e a~a ins t South Vietnam opened fi ve u·eeks ago. Sixteen ships ;11re Russian. I t others tly the flag s of nther Communist countries includ ing l\1ainland Ch ina . Cuha . Poland and Ea st German v. The remaining nine are Hong Kong bllsfd ships believ ed under Communist Chinese charter. ll appears that if. arter the period of grace. captains of 1ncom1ng ships are willing to chance running through the mines to reach North Vietname.se harbors, no U.S. effort will be made to stop them. C_ool Spills Over Nation Wet Weatlier Spreads East to Midwest, Northwest Temperat11res •l'/A l•ON ~l W!o>J "ll l ~!IVICI 1 0-l C.A ~I !•?AM t ~T ~-10 ~ 7'/ •rt 1s. Thi wr t w•••ll...-whid1 -il;ed ttw 111llt11t'1 m!dsrctlon ''' Ille Sii" ,.,,. e11v1 f'l\OYed t •sl. brlnol"I r1ln 11'4 tl'lltl"!Mr1,,.,.,..r\ ,...,.., ttw Ol'llo •l'llf ,._ Ml-v1t1•r• to tl'lt C1reltM1 •rid J.OUll\tffl Ntw £ntl t nd. •lbl•~ .,,,,,, .. 151 ...... ,~ ..... 8 MICI"' BufP•lo Cll1•lt1'"" .Cll1•fett• ClllCI~ C!11Clnnu • c 1ew•111d Denvt r De1 .v 11111r1 De•roft Fort Wort/I Hoooh.1111 MOlil\'O'I lndl1111p0l11 IC•,,tl ' ClfV l.11 Vf'Qll L11t1t l oc:k Loul1'fll!1 M!trnl Mllw1Vlo. .. Ml11M1ootl1.St. Pt lJI Ntw Ori••"' Ntw Vor-k Olil•lwl'I• Cttv """"' Jtl'lf110t!Ol'l1• Pllot11!• Plftsbuftll ......... Ale.II,_,., SI. LOI.Iii Stlt Lt~t t !W .. ,. 'r•t1C.l1C.t1 ....... WHllll'llllOl'I Ml•l'I l O'# l'rr<. •c ,, 1 u 11 50 )1 10 511 Cl " .. " " ., .. ,, ,, " •• ,, " " " " • ,, • " " • " ., ,, " . , " 11 " " .. .. " .. ,, " M " " '" " " .. 51 1 :t " " " " " 0 al, JI . .. " . .. " ,, Jl " " " " .. . . " " .. " ,, 11 ~ .. II n " •• " ,M ,, JO 3012 l O "1.~~~ • IJ" W(Jo ll•l I IC'!CX Al l (! California s1i:r1t win "* 1U1111v •lld tt!fl11t!'tlurt• 1N1r..v ""~" WtdMJd•V• fortc1tttr1 '" Lew CIOUdJ •IOllO lflt CCl tl f~ 1tle ~fll!19t l "ld lilt II "lfll'll wlfi l )Vf Wl y It I ~10~ WtdMJdl "f of 11 111 L."6 Arlfll" Ul'ldlllr t ltl•r lillft. Ille NeKoro•I WN !ller Ser\11~ NhJ. TM I ... tonF ... I wt1 fortc_ttt to IMI .Y. V.S. Summar11 Cod -ltlt r 1otl!td ewr most ol l'tie M llOll't tltllrft 1'1•11 ted•Y• lowtf· ffl1 '"""'lturH "' ™ ,,, 111 ,...,.., .. ,. NP1rlv l fl ll'IC!I •M I 1'1111 of r•l11 dren<l'll<t Lll(~bou•"' _.1, l'O<U Stw ""'' COlumbu•, Ot>fo. durh"ll IM-Nfll!. S~•1 •l'ld tl'lul'IMr1~ 11w l•ll (I<'! !flt N•b<1•-• P•,.,,.ridl• •rid "l~l'I 01,01• IO W••lllnol(l<'I Ind pllrl• e' O•tOO"· Snow °'lrhl "ll•ld wtfh lfll ••In 111 II~'" o! MO"t•"•· 11'>e Ntllo"-1 Wt1lhr• Sl'f"Vl~r ,,_ Ctil'M <lt1•¥H rePOrl~ 181f Mflrwl•'f tl'lflt rlk11• 111 •"•" ol. 11 ll'ICl'llt• 1'1.wl t1tt11 r~ordld 111 N•h 01 teu1t>tr11 Ml1!ltilppf !r""•V '"" Sunch 't fllfl'll t. t:oa~tal Su11nv tod•v--L!•lll v•ri•b•• w1M• 11191'11 •l'ld _,.,,,.. N:N•I M<omino _.,,,,., 10 10 1a ~11t1" In •ll••nt10111 IOd•V IM Wld,.W•'f. Hlll't l°"'y 11, C~91•1 '''""r1tvrt• r1not trom ~ t~ f7 tnl11'!d ltmPl•••U•t • ••llO• from 't to 73. W•lll' ftfl'IH r111,.., ''· Sun, /ffnAll. TlllO's TUllOAV lttlll'd Moll f·lt I "" ~-~ $K9'1(1 l(!W lt;D •·""· 8 ~ WID•ISOAV .. .... , l'li9ll •ff>•• low StcO"d hlell S1tor.d I!""' Ill" I I'" J ·(1 f I"" ,._ "'•rt J 11 •"' f:H •"' 11 l:J.11 m ~' 11!!0 11 '"'· I I t ·)to"' e• ,, .. f ·I ) II"' St~l tllr,.. in,1ect a positive nott , followtd up the "big stick·• !Reties of his blockade order by da ngling in fron t nl the Comm unists a carrot or no mean proportions. He offered to withdraw all American for ces from Vitlnam within four months after return of U.S. war prisoners and tslablishment of a n intunation811y supervised ce11 se-fire. The fate of the Saigon government was left to be determined by political negotiations between the North Vietnamese and authorities in the South. • This was the most li be ral offer Nixon ha! madt . It relumed, in effect, to the "two track" theory put forward by Pre.i;idential adv iser Heo ry A. Kissinger early in the Nixon administration. At that time . the idea "'as to have purely military negotiations between Hanoi and Washington. lea ving the Vietnamese t.o negoli,te the political settlement on their own. Nixon's injectio n of American ''honor'' into the mi1 as a factor which led to his decision was bound to spark criticism frorn so me congressmen ind other Americans repeatedly have rejected the lde11; that It would be humil iat ing for the United Stalell to simply p11ck up and pull out. Howeve r, recent polls have shown that tlie American public -wtary as It is of the frustrati ng conflict in lndochina - 11upporled the President's resumption of bombing of the North lifter Hanoi's in· vasion across the the s up po 11ed l y sacrosanct Demilitarized Zone. The President presumably believes lhe publi c likewise will suppo rt his blockade, des~ite the obvio u.s peril it poses of a fearful con· frontation with the Sov iet Union. Nixon, in an ob vious effort lo prtvent the Kremlin from calli ng off the summit conference, urged Russia not to Jet the •·arrogance" and "intransigence'' of the North Vietnamese leader.s sabotage the progress alrtad y made in, Soviet· Americ11n negotiations. He mentioned the ga ins made toward agreement on nuclear arms limlt.Atioru: and the prospect of ex- panded trade. !Heany Backs Action McGover11 Calls Decision 'Flirtation With WWlll' WA SHINGTON (UPI J -Sen . George ~1 cGovern called President Nixon·s decision lo mine ahd blockade seaports of North Vietnam "flirtation with World \Var Il l," and Sen. Vance Hartke said the President had placed the world "72 hours from Armageddon .·~ Rut so me other member! of Congre ss called lor the na tio n to rally hehind Nix· on , and they y.•ere joined by .. AFL-CIO Presiden t c:eo rge Mea ny, a critic of Ni x· on "s domestic pol icies. "In this time of crisis with-60,000 li ves at st ake I think the American people should back up the President irrespective of politics or any other consideration," Meany said. Hartke, ,....,ho ha s sought the Demotralir. presidential nomination. used some of the strongest language. The Indiana senator called Ni:a:on's move "the most reckless act of inlernational lawlessness that any America n President ha.s e\'er com· mitted." McGovern. campaigning in Nebraska for the slate's primary tocl}ly. said the Nixon step was an escala tion that was ''reckless. unnecessary and unv.•orkabte." He said Nixon had taken the most dange rous cou~ that has been followed in the history of the war. Sen. Hubert H. ~lu'mphrey, McGovern's chief rival for the Democratic nomina· lion, llaid he would slop campaigning and fly ba ck to W11sh ington today to consu lt 'filh the congressinnal leadershi p abou t the new war development. He said the Nixon sltp was a "serious escalation'' !hat was "filled with unpredictable danger." Sen. Edmund S. l\1 uski~. an inactive presidentia l candidate. said Nixon ~·as '"risking a major confrontation with the Soviet Union and ""'ith China. and he is jeopardizi n.R: major security interests or the United States." Ala bam a Go\'. George C. \\'allacl'! said he wa nted "any acti-0n any president takes ... to bring peace and end the war." Rep . Paul N. McCloskey Jr. IR-Calif. l, whn opposed Nixon .&ll an anli\\'Rr C<Jn- didate in the early Republican presiden · tial primaries, said Nixon 's action ~'as •·completely ou tside his constitutional powerll." Rep. John Ashbrook (R·Ohiol, Nixon's conservetive challenger, said he supported the President but felt "it prob- ably was too litt le too late." He said the North Vietnamese ha\'e enough supplies ,_ ---··· s't E Reds Experts Against Mines PEAR L HAR.BOR (UP ll ~ N.11vy source5 at Pearl Harbor sayll the P1tcific f'!eet expects the North \1ietname~e lo immed iately begin minesweeping operations off the Port of Haiphong. The fleet headq uarters ha.s !he operat ional job of mining the ma in harbors in North Vietnam, but its experls are fully aware that ~he Commun ists are exper ts ;it mine laying and s1\1eeping. ~lines long have bee n l'I f;:i vor ite \YeApon Of :he Co mmunity nat ions. One souree said there was nothing to prevent lht No rth Viet- namese from sweeping I he HaiphOng channels "'ilh~n minutes after the 11irborne mines were dropped, unless American air an'd Jea power moves in 'to protect the newly-laid fiel ds. to carry their oUensive to July or August. Sen. Robert P. Griffin , the Republi can whip in the Senate, described Nixon's decision as "strong med icine, but necessarv." House Repu blican Leader Gerald -Ford pred icled the blockade would "stop the fighting" by keeping v.•ea pons out of the hands of the North Vietnamese. The League of Families of POWs and MIAs in Soul.hea st Asia said it "'as happy Nixo n had stated the prisoners of war \vert: of priority importance. l_n. a state· men t it de:iicri bed Nixon's decision as a "very signifi cant develo pment." TY1·0 ve ter11n Repu blican senatorll ex- pressed misgivings about the decision. Sen. Jacoh Javils tR-N.Y.). said the United Sl1ttes should tia ve gntten out of Vietnam "long before this" and Sen. George Aiken (R-Vt.). sa id he did not believe the mining of the h;irbors would have "much effect on battles." ,. .. . r GI IN VIETNAM LISTENS QUIETLY, CARRIES 'llG STICK' Soldltr Ll1ten1 lo Pr11ldenf Wh ile Lt1n ln9 on His Muhln.,un • • Italy Vow! Fascists Resurging 1l0f\t£ (UPll -Neo-F11scists ha ve scored their greatest election triumpll since World \VAr II toda y and t~e West't lar~est Communist party suffered Its first setback. \\'ith 98 percen t of the senate vott counted in the nation's sixth postwar na· tional t:leclion, Neo-Fascist.s held 9.1 per· cenl of lht vote -up 2.4 pe rcent from the 1968 eleclio n -::ind Y.'tre 11.ssured at least 19 seats in the 322-stat senate. Th!y held nine aftrr lhe last election. The Con1m11nists polled 28.4 pPrcenl ln the !enate figh t, do\1•n•l.6 percent, and suffered !heir fi rs t re1·ersal in any !.·BRIEFS pastw11 r efecllon. The party remained the seco nd largesl in Ita ly, but the setback.5 carried im portant psycholog ical and political imporlance. The Christi11 n [)en1ocrats. the major postwar pl)\Yer lri Italian poli tics. re· tained its posir ion as the biggest single party &nd polled 3R. I pe rcent. of the vote with it camp aig n centered on rejection of extremism and maintenance of la w and order. By Assoeiatrd Pre5S Sen. Hube rt H. Humphrey, seek ing some momentum for his presidential campa ign, meets Sen. George McGovern in Nebraska and Gov. George C. Wallace in \Vest Virginia today in a pair of non· binding Democratic -pre f er enc e primaries. After his na rrow victories l ~sl week over l\fcGovern in Oh io 11nd \V;i llace in lndiana, Humphr<'.V has concentrafed he;ivily on Ntbr11sk::i in 1he p11~t week in hopes of upsetti ng the previously favored McGovern 'ln whal mnv bf' thei r clearest head-lo-he a1I test before the June t California primary. The contest is now rated a tosM!p. Jn West Virginia, Wal lace caricelled his only scheduled appear;ince of the week ilt the face of polls making Humphrey a lieavy favorite in the stAte where , in 1960, Hum phrey lost a cruci al presidential pri mary to John F'. Kennerly. Both l-lun1phrey nnd McGovern 11.n- nouncerl Monday ni.11ht in Nebr11sk;i that !hey WPre breakin~ off their campaign ing In return to W;ish ing ton in liRht of Presi- dent Nixon·s announcemen t of new moves in Indochina. -::r -:.; tr AVON PARK, f\a. (A Pl -Two U,S. Air Force crewn1en ha\"e been killed 1A•hen two F4 Phti nto m jet fighte~ bombers collided Mnnday during a !raining mission and crashed on the Avon Park gunnery ra nge . TYIO other crewmen escaped serious injury. A spokesman at Homeslead Air f"orce ba se.. where the planes IA'Cre stationed, identified the dead men as A1aj. Cl ayton Erlward Hotchkiss, 40, Castille, N.Y .• and Capt. William Scolt "Yeager, 23, Con· ne:-ville , Pa. Listed in good <'ond ition al MarDilJ AF'B hospit;il in Tampa u·rre Cri pt. Nick Neston Nass ick .J r., 30, Kens ington. Pa. and Capt. Thomas Alonro Webb Jr., 29, Ridgela nd . S.C. ii i::r * WASHINGTON (AP I Sen. John V. Tunney ! !).Calif. J, says substantial e\'idence ind icat es U.S. Attorney Harry Ste1vard of San Die,11:0 was cle;ired of any \\'rongdoing by Richtird <;. Kleindiens t because St eward "'h;id prevented a poten· lially em barra11sing JX>litical scandal " for the Repub licans. Kleindienst was drputy a 1 torn ey genera l at the time Srewadr ">l'as clti.;ired and his nomination to succeed John N . ~1 itchell as chie f of !he: Justice Depart· ment is now pendin_g before the Senate. Tunney, v.•ho is opposi ng Klt?indienst'!t confirmalion , said toda y Ste 111ard had bttn clea"red de~pile his interference witli a federal investigation of Alle,e:ed ly illegal. co ntributions to President Ni xon's 1963, campaign 11nd other C.OP candida tes. But another Democrat ic liAera l on !he committee, Sen . Philip A. Hart of Michigan. sa id in a se pa rale st ate ment that he was unable to ronclude that thl!! action taken by Kleindie nst was im· proper. WASHI NGTON IUPI ) -Procter & Gamble, the soapmaking giant which said It would not market h a 7. a r d o u ! ·: detergents, ha11 bern told by the~Fnod and : Drug Admin islra.lion (FflA ) to pr:int warning labels on Spic and Span cleanser ' atnd Cascade dishwashi ng detergent. "We 11 rt n't sure what we are going to do,'' a Procter & G1tmble spnkemsn s:i id. ''We are awsire of no significpnt in. juries rrom these products. They've undergone !he fufl range of our .safely tes ting." 1 • ! : Howev er, the Fr>A said iLS te.Sts lridi· 1 c11.~ed th11t Spic anri Span is a sev~r~ t'ye Irritant, and Cascade a mild eye in'itant that i! ha rmful ir swallowed . Industry sources said both products lead their respective m1t rkets in ;;ales . D.i.ILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Oel!vfry or tlit Dally Piiot ll 011<1r&ntttd M11111t.tv-i-rM~r : II you de r1111 l!•vr vet1r JlotOtt bY J;)O 11.m • <•II •rid VflUf COllV Will H brouQlll le Voll. C•ll1 i re l&lttn 1111111 1;llll o.m • 5•1urll•V •lld Sund•YI If VflU de llOI r1Ct l\;f V&vr to«IV ~V t •.m. 51 h.1re11y, or I '·"'· Sundt y, t •11 11\d • <OCIV Will N IH'llt.19~1 I'll "!'011. C•ll••trt !lken wnHI 18 1,11'1 TPlepho11'' M<lat 0.t "Clt Co\ll'IV Ar•-• , ~l-021 Nllrtr!Wf'•I MU"ll"lillll l~(l'I 11\d Wtll"'ll.,,trrr 1-.1m ''" (ff1M"1 t , C111IUN~'! ll•!dl. S..11 Jll-'11 C11111111fto, 0.111 "°'"I+ ~ L1911111, L•7Vftl N(f11t1 "f-'42t ' ' i • ' 7 ' rf0ttay'11 Flnal Orange Coast EDITIOlll N.Y. Stoeks VOL 65, NO. 130, 3 SECTtONS, « PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, MAY 9, '1972 N TEN CENTS Report Prepared on Airport· Nui.sance Suit·s· By JACK BROBACK ot tM ~ltr , .... Still Or&11ge County Counsel Adrian Kuyper has prepared a confidential report to the Board of Supervisors reviewing recent court actions regarding operation of air- ports and possible lawsuits which ·rould be filed and might run into billions of dollars. Kuyper's report was delivered to super- visors' olfices Monday evening and has •Ot yet been discussed by the board. It i! believ~, however, that the re- port states that current lawsuits against Orange County 1n reference to jet <11)-- eralions at Orange County Airport are based on inverse condemnation (loss of property value) and that the recent state Supreme Court decision which sanctions lawsuits based on public nuisance wiU not apply unless the $28 million in com- plaints filed by residents of Newport Beach are amended. Daniel Emory. chairman of the New. port Beach anti airport noise committee, stated last week that attorneys for the Newport Couµcil Action Here ln brief are the major actioiis taken by Newport Beach councilmen Monday: AIRPORT -Adopted resolution calling on county supervisors to either get guarantees from airlines that they will pay damages i£ homeowners win $30 million noise suits or shut down Orange County Airport. LIDO HIGH RISE -Voted in executive session to join federal govern- ment in po!lutiori suit against Lido Apartments developer. COAST FREEWAY -Voted to send representative to May 18 llighway Comm ission meeting y:ith plan to terminate Newport Freeway on Coast High- way in Huntington Beach. DENSITY -Told planning commission to move immediately to lower den sity limits citywide as it develop s new high rise standards. S...CURVES -Ordered widening ()f onE" lane, ronstruction of barrier and possible installation of "Bolt's Dots" (rumble :strips) to slow down traffic on Irvine Avenue curves. SIGHT PLANE -Approved two more buildings in Newport Center, but said that:• all Wltil height rontrols are agreed up0n. TENNIS UGBTS -Reverse.d ban on installation 0£ lights at Via Jucar teMis court on Lido Isle. ISLAND ZONING -Told planning commission to hold hearings on plan to rezone all of Balboa Island from R-2 (duplexes) to" R-1;2 (single-family with garage apartments). CANNERY VU.LAGE -Extended emergency ordinance requiring stiff parking controls for one year. ON.STREET PARKING -Postponed until May 22 action on proposal to ban overnight parking of all trucks, vans and recreational vehicles and trail. ers more than 22 feet in length. POLICE ADDITION -Rejected all bids for temporary addition to police headquarters because lowest was 30 percent over estimate. Westminster Pair Shot . To Death on Doorstep By TERRY COVILLE Of 111• D1l1T Pllet Slaff A Westminster couple were shot to death early this morning on the doorstep of their home, apparently as they return· ed from a night out. · Police said Frank Marcus Schiavone, 41, and his wife, Shirley Rine Schiavone, 44, were both shot in the back as they stepped through the doorway of their borne st 6202 Choctaw Drive. Their bodies were discovered by their lt-year-0ld son, Steven, who was asleep in his bedroom, but woke up when he heard the shots, police said. two weeks ago in Vietnam . Another neighbor, Joe Maher, added: "There's a numb shock when you hear something like this. The w h o 1 e neighborhood is worried." Pollce investigators spent the day searching the house and yard for the weapon or weapons and any other signs of what happened. The boy, Steven, attends Finley School fn the Westminster school district. He telephoned police after discovering the bodies of his parents. The Schiavone home Is in a 'housing tract called "Indian Village" in northwest Westminster, near the San Diego Freev.·ay. committee are studying lhe lawsuita filed to detennine if they should be amended to cover public nuisance. In his confidential report, Kuyper Is also beiteved to have advised board rnern· bers that lf the local Jawsllits are so amended he will recommend that the two commercial airline operators at the county airport -Air Califontia and Hughes Airwest -should be brought into the action as cross defendants. Kuyper, it is said, did 11.ot express great alarm over the Supreme Court de· Closure Of Field Suggested A-resolution calling ror Orange Count:g supervisors to close Orange County Airport within 60 days unless airlines guaranli!e t() cover the $30 million homeowners want in noise lawsuits was adopted by Newport Beach councilmea Monday nlght. On • I to e vote, wlDl councilman Paul Ryckoff absta.ining without comment, they said they want the airllnts to post bonds or other financial · guarantees to cover the dollar amount of the llllts "to protect the taxpayers of the county of Orange." Councilman Milan Dostal introduced the resolution, pointing out that a California Supreme eoUrt decision has opened the way for judgments against publicly owned airports on the grounds of nu isance and inconsistency in zoning. Previously, suits were allowed only on the basis of hard-to-determine deprecia· tion of property values. "It's a whole new ball game as far as the legal issues are concerned," Dostal observed. He pointed out that a similar threat by Los Angeles to 1hut down its in· ternational airport is no more than an al· tempt to get the Calif()rnia Legislature to get cities and counties excluded from any responsibility. "They hope to stampede t h e Legislature into action ," Dost.al said. He said his proposal is different in that it attempts to put the responsibility for damages .. on the polluters, themselves,'' meaning the air carriers who use the airport. "Let them indemnify so residents won't have to pay," Dostal said. "If they don't do this, then the county should suspend all jet operations," be said. Councilman Carl KymJa expressed reluctance in casting his vote for the resolution. "1 hope this resolution wiJI not impair or be a detriment to recent discussions on getting the airport moved," he said. "If this action in any way speeds up actions on the part or the Supervisors lG (See AIRPORT, Page !) cision which was based on a ruling by a Los Angeles County Superior Court con. cerning Santa l\1onica ttlunicipal A1rport . He ls said tG have noted that in such iegat actions the nuisanc-e fa ctor would have to be proved in court. Kuyper is said to have referred to a statement .by city attorney Roger Ame-. betgh of Los Angeles that Los Angeles International Airport should be closed down unless airlines and tht federal gov. ernment protect the city from claims • losses or damages resulting from jet op. erations. Kuyper. however. is believed tG have made no reference tG a statement last week by Newport Beach City Counclhnan Milan Dostat in which he suggested that Orange County Airport be shut down if guarantees "are no_t put up by airlines In a reasonable period or time, 30 to 60 days." Kuyper is said to have pointed out <."OUnty regulations affecting flights by Air Cal and Air1~·est which limit hours of CHINA 0 100 MILf.S UPI Ntwtmaf MAP INDICATES SEA AND RAIL LINKS ORDERED CUT PrHident Moves to Hilt North Vietnam W1r Supplies Gravel: Secret Papers Opposed Mining Ports WASHINGTON' (UPI) -Sen. Mike Gravel (0-Alaska) released sec ret docu· ments today showing that the Central Intelligence Agency advised President Nixon in 1969 that mining North Vlet- namese ports and bombing major rail arteries was an unworkable military ac- tion. Gravel rE"ad tG the Senate portions of a national security memorandum tn which the State Department, the CI A and the office of the Secretary of Defense advised against attempting to interdict supplies entering North Viet11am by land and sea. The CIA study which Gravel read said mining the harbors would not work be· cause supply ships could anchor outside the mined areas, and send in supplies to • the ports in shallow draft vessels. The CIA said the "multiplicity of modes ot transport routes" In North Vietnam made it unlike.ly that BS2s arid U.S. Nav. al forces could shut ofr the flow ()f military supplies inlo Vietnam , Gravel said. In addition, the CIA was pessimistic about the impact of Interdicting rail lines. In ()Oe instance, It noted. ll rail. road bridge was destroyed by U.S. air· power an d the North Vietnamese were still abte tG move '100 tons a day across th~ river by use of a ferry. The State Oepartme11t studr said "in praclical terms. it would be impos~lble to mine the harbo rs because North Viet. nam had so many ports suitable for off. the-beach loadinj!." One-neighbor said he heard the mufned shots about 2:20 a.m., looked out his win- dO\V and saw a me<lium built, lightl y clothed man running around the corner of the Schiavone home. Police investigators said they have no theory yet On why the double murder "'as committed . The murder weapon has not been found. Lido Pumpi.ng May Go On Arter the President's s~ch ~1ondsy night, lhP. Pentagon warned that if the Soviet Union and other suppliers or weapons to J·lanol tried to unlo,qd their rrel1Zhtcrs off.shore. the Unitf'd Stair~ would attempt to sink the shallnw-drafl ll~hte.rs carrying gOOds from there to shore. Schiavone, a pressman for the L<ing Beach Independent Press-Telegram, was shot in the back while bis wife was hit in the head and tn the blft:k, by an as yet unknown callber of bullet, police said. The couple were apparently shot from outside, police expltllned, and their bodies were strttched across the open doorway wbtn Steven found them. A neighbor, Peter Garland, described the Schlavones as "good people". He said they have a aon, John, In Burbank, and another M>n, Richard, who ~·as woqnded Precaution Failed SAN DIEGO (AP) -The explosloo Sunday of Apollo 11 command ship gas fumes occurred duri1g a new safety pro-cedure tak•n by the National Space Agency, a NASA spokesman· said Mon- day. The trplosk>n during defueling in 1 hangar at North Island Naval Afr Stallon ttnt 1hr1pneJ..lJke metal through tbt air. I Coun,cil Approves lnt,ervention in Federal Suit f A federal judge Monday said waste · • sulfide level in the waste at an acceptable water pumping at th~ high rise con-le~.el. . struction site near the entrance to Lido The city sought entry tn the action . against the developers because ~f the Isle may con~i.fl~e, but under newly potential threat to the general welfare or lightened restnct1ons. • Newport Beach residents," aaid Assistant Just a few hours later, ~ewport Beach City Attorney David Baade, who attended councilmen approved city intervention in M()nday's hearing in Los Angeles. the federal government's lawsuit which Is "Problems could come up in the future seeking a halt to all such polluUon tn the that we can answer best," Baade said. future. Newport Beach Mayor Donald Mcinnis The Part Lido Development Corpora.· said the city's entry into the case was Uon and South Coast Construct.ion Qmr "'definitely not grandstanding.'' pany or Costa Mesa, deveJope:rs of the "We were conCl'.med since this project high rl,., eontend thal any halt to the and problem glvu the appearance of pwnping could cause i r rep a r ab I e dragging on and on,11 MclMls said today, da~ag~ tt1 lbe structure. "We are adding our o'"'" weighl at this D1str1ct Judge Warrtn Ft r cu son point because we felt it was requirtd ~ ordered another hearing June U. get some aciion , 11 he added . ~ !rf6Jor chaoBes 1n the goyemmenl order "This aclon Is perhaps the nrst or Its will affect Ume or dlscharee and the kind in our city and we wanted to get In 1moun1 o1 lestlnr needed to keep the on It ao we ean lake Umely action on any . . problems tn the future," Mcinnis said. ~·we are chagrined the problem has gone on so long." The new restrictk>ns on pumping 1et llm!U based on the tides, Bude said. · The developers may pump anywhere (rom [our to Sil hours at I time depen- ding upon how high the tide is. HThey can pump for a certain number or hours before and 1 certain number after the tide reaches its hJgh point,'' Baade said. .... Intensi ve testing of the waste wa ter for sulfide levels Is also part of Ole new modifications. "While pumping, the diJCharge must be te!ited two limes durlng each first and last hour or pumping Ind One time per hour in bct\\'ctn. '' Dude 1ald. •The U.S. attorney's olftce must be In· formed under oath or all test results, he added. The Office of the Secretary of Defense. Gravel said, concluded that a mini mum or 6.000 attack sortits a month woulij ht required to close the two rail lines from China and the interdiction of the 7 lo 10- route road network from China would be sUll more difficult. •1n.us It ts not possible to give a def· tn.lte answer to the question of how much more essential Imports could come into North Vietnam if ~a Imports •ff d~nitd tind a strong air campaign is lnl!iated." thf> studr said. Grave said the pape:rs he read showtd that the "tntlre intel11gence gatherin~ system cl the United Statts" was against a blockodc. · The study Gravel read from Is en-.-. tilled N•tiona1 Security Siudy Memoran- dum No. 1. It was prepared under the direction or Dr. ltenry Kissinger. the President's chit! forelgn. pollcy ad\•lser, at the outset or the Nixon admlnlstratlon. Several newspapers have published portions or tbe memorandum, but no( - according to Gravel -the parts aboul blochdl1g thal he reld lodl1. - operation, mandatt' flight patterns to avoid Dying over home areas and ()thers which he said were plus fac tors in fav or of the county in any legal action . He ls also said to have mentioned the county's noise monitoring program ra. vorably. The attorney Is atso believed to ha~ noted that the Air Cal contract now ill force calli; for strict regulation of n;.,hts and patterns and that similar restri • ns could be writttn into the new Alrwest contract now under negotiation. 60 Vessels, 350 Planes Take Part SAIGON !AP! -,,,. biggest U.S. 1lr and naval task force ever assembled In Vietnam began mining the entrancts to Haiphong and other North Viet namese ports today and heavily bombarded railroads and highways in North Viet~ nam. The U.S. Command! reported one Nor1b RELATED STORIES PAGES 3 AND 4 TODAY Vlelname .. MIG jet 1hot down during the mining operation, the seventh ·MIG reported downed In four days. The command said the initial phases of the blockade announced by President Nixon Monday night "have been suc-- cessfully accomplished" and the Navy planes that dropped the delayed-action mines to seal off the enemy's harbors all ret~ned safely to their carriers. But the commander of a cruLler- deslroyer flotilla in the Tonkin Gulf, fttar Adm. Rembrandt C. Robinson, was killed Monday night and bis chief ()f staff and his operations officer were missing wlii!n their helicopter developed engine trouble and crashed as they were trying to land aboard the cruiser Providence. Robinson, 47, was the first admlraJ to die in the Vietnam war. The Navy said it marshaled a force or 1t least 60 ships -including five aircraft carriers with 350-400 warplanes, four cruisers and 30 destroyers -to mine all entrances to North Vietnamese ports, to cut off the delivery of war materials through the territorial wat ers of North Vietnam, and to sever rail and other communication Jines ashore. More ships were on ihe way, including the carrier Saratoga lrom the Atlantic Fleet. She was expected within a week. The 7th Air Force has more than MIO strike planes flying from bases i.A Thailand and South Vietnam. U.S. Command spokesmen said air strikes continued over North Vietnam to-- day. They gave no detalls of the day'• operations but said attacks in the North nearly doubled dwlng the past week to .. an average of about 200 strlkes a day. America n planes returned to the Hanol area Monday for the first time in three weeks. ' The aerial mining or llaiphong cen· lered on a narrow channel called the Canal f\.1a ritime which was dredged into !See MINES, Pag• Ii Orange C.alt ·• WeatJter Skies will be fair except tor early morning low clouds. Highs should range b'om &f.72 with the lows from 53-58.. INSIDE TODAY TM mining town of ldria witl shut down at lht end of school, hs 120-ytar hiJrory ending iii concern otlfr ecology mid poUu- tiott. St.t. SIOTJI, Page 12. L,M. ··~· I C1lll•r11t1 I Cleulll141 11·,. C9"t:U U Cl"ft1'"1'C lS rn..111 Hetk" t l•IMrlll I'-' IRltri.111mtlll It ' l'INuwe lf.11 l'er l~t lt;Hll'• I H•l"ft(... 14 &.,, Ltllft" U ' I Mnl.. l t M\llUI L lluMh fl N1tl4o11tt N ... t • °''"'" ,_fY t SMtlt lf.1' '"'" Mlrtlet\ 1•11 TMll'ltatl 1t "M111ttrl 1t WNll'ltt t W~llt W11ll 11 WlmH't lttwt 1).1• Wtrlf ......... t . - ' f O"IL'r' P1LDl ,, Mont/i's Draft 9,000: 1-35 WASHINGTON IAPl -Tilt ~tJve Strvlce Sy 1 t e m an- nounced today It will order a.bout 9,000 young men with lottery numbers t through 35 to report to the Anny Jn June. The move Is aimed at c<>mpleting a call. last March for 15,000 men over the April·May.June period, the draft J1eadquarlers said, Only those men with numb<!rs J through 1~ have been taken. t.1osl or the new· inductees 'A'ill be rcglstrantl In classes !·A and l-A-0 who were bom In 1952, but ''a sn1all number or older men also wi ll be issued orders," the announcemenl said. Beach District Will Analyze Canal Study The city-county Joint Harbor Com- mittee today directed Newport Beach and Harbor District staffs lo jolntly study nltunatives and costs of improvements !or Balboa Island 's Grand Canal. The committee also directed staff legal counsels to isolate authority and responsibilities invol~ed on Grand Conal between the city and the harbor district. An opinion by-Oran'ge County Counsel on funding of-repairs and dredging to the ' . Grand Canal wu read 1t the committee meetlng. County counsel advised that the Harbor Distr ict mny expend funds for main· tenance of the Grand Canal if It is a navigable part of the harbor. He said that bulkheads most often are designed to protect the uplands and that use of Newport Harbor tidelands fund s could be used for any part of th'e canal project. Larry Leaman, chief of ope rations for the district said that in the staff's opi- nion there were two main points to the legal opinion by the county counsel : -The district may use budg eted funds H it is clear that the Grand Canal Ls of regional importance. Budgeted funds may not be used lf the canal Ls not or regional importance. ..:Staff opinion was that lht canal 11 not of rtgiOOal importance and'therefore feels that tlpenditure of Harbor District funds annot be made. Newport llarbor tldelands funds could be apent however. Tlie_re. was some concern by C09llJli~tee members that any ixtenslve dredflng operation would weaken e x 1 s t n g bulkfieads and tha t they would then col· lapse. Frank Robi nson, committee member, said that "what we're really talking about here is the repair of the bulkheads." Robinson was concerned about setting a precedent for .harbor district funding to repair bu1khead5 throughout the Newport U:arbor. Newport Beach City Manager Robert L. Wynn said that bulkheadlng was .en essenti1'1! part or providing a navigable waterway through Grand Canal and that as such It would be considered within the Harbor District'! authority. Estimate! for replacing of the bulkhead on lx>th sides of the canal would be in the arta or $250,000. A cost of $3,000 to $5,000 could be involved for outside consultants to study engineering and repairs o! the cani:I. Office Ransacked A Nev.•po rt Beach real estale mun reached 1 he office ~1onday to find some- one wi!h a pair ()( pliers had preceded him and twisled the doorknob off. Dan Olmstead immediately checked the office at 363 San Miguel Drive and discovered the burglary of nearly $1.000 in office equipment includ ing an electric typewriter. OlANll COAST N DAILY PILOT Tll• Or1119t CH'I OAIL'I' f'ILOr, willl whi(ll h c:~lncd tn1 Htws P•t n , •• publllht'!I by tM Or1nat CIMJI Pllbll,hll'IO Compan~ s.,... re!f «tl!10n1 "'' l!Yb!•lllf'll, MOl'dlV !hroUQh Frld1y. lor Co,1~ Mt~•. NtwpOtl Betcll, liunlUIQIOn lh.c:fl1F&Jnlf•n V~lltr. L~Ollfl• Rt~ch, l•vlnt1~1ddl"11c~ lllll Stn (lemtn!t/ S,tn Ju~ll C~Dl\Jt~no fl 1lnolt •111lon•I tcltl<ll~ h ~uti1•1hfd St!UUl~YI INI Su"'3tV\, ri.. pflM•O•I put1ll1hono 011n1 h ti lJO w~11 B•r .StrH1, COii• Mtll, Ctlllar.111, th)i . Robert N. Wttcl Pr~\lcftnl •1111 P1inh1fltr J 1tlr R. Curley Vitt Prn lll1t1I •1111 GtM•1t M1n.t~tr Thom11 Kt1•il EOllor Thtlftll A. Murp~int Ml nlOlllll E••lllt L P1lt r Kritt NtwpOrt l1Kll Cl!t ["1111' N.-,.rt ·-· Offk-e llJJ N1wport lowl t¥1rcl M1ffin1 Adclrt11: P.O. lox 11'1$, 9166"1 °""' Offlca Otltt Mt111: :aJO W11I B1y Sl'l'ttf l.q-l tlCPI: m F~·n ........ w HWlllMfClfl B11cn: lrt1J luC'fl 10\lltYtl'O $M (1tmlftll: as NOrt!I 1:1 CA'""'° 11:.,.1 Tel.,.._ 1714) Ml ... J21 CJ.WW A .... 111 .. HZ·l,71 ~I, nn. °'""' co11t fl•lllllllftt Clll'll-y. NI \'lt'WI t•lti. llknlr1llof!\, ,..;....... m.• ., edYt"IMll'ltntl ... ,,, _, .. rlllPf'MllCN ..... .,,..,. .,.i.1 ...,, """""" flf ftlrfTltlll -· ~ CS.. ....._ ... .i C•to ~ c.lffwftit. ~lien .... tol'fllf tUJ MMflll'fl • "'9ll p,11 ......,.,, ml/?IWJ' ................... Mesa Asks More Time On Fairview By RUDI NIEDZJEl.'iKI Of lht Dtlly l'!ltl 1111' C.Osta ?i.1c.sa M<Jyor Jack 11ammett lo- . day asked the state General Se rvlces Department to allow city oflicial5 more Lime lo develop a plab for the acquisition of 257-acres of stale surplu.s property for Fairvie\v Park. A 3£kiay time limit. llammrtt said, makes it "fiscally impossible" to work out .a purchase plan for the prnperty behind Estancia Hi gh Sehool In Costa A1esa. Jn a Jetter to Lawrence Robinson, director of General Service!, Hammett said, "If we are considering a bOnd elee~ tiOJ\·ln November, we must take .actions for that determin ation now .• Hit is obvious that it would be in im- possibility for two public entities such as the city of Costa J\1esa and the County of Orange to even meet and commence the legal procedures, as we!\ as in- tergovernmental negotiations , within the time limit given to us by the Public Works Board." At a public hearing a week ago, lhe -State Public Works · Board delayed disposal of a 46.f>-acre port ion of the park site to a private developer under the con- dit ion that local plans to acquire the overall .acreage be presented before its June 5 meeting. The 3<ktay period of grace was follow· ed by a demand from Robinson that Costa 1w1esa back its commitment to the park by agreeing to a $4 million purchase pri ce for the properly. Han1mett said that the June 5 deadline "emascul ates'' the possibility of Costa Mesa to complying with the demand, especially since no funds are immediately · available for outright purcha se. "We have no objection to th e general tenor of the proposa l, but do object to the finality and the time limits imposed, and also the lack of opportunity to negotiate a proposition which would be of benefit IG the state. county and the city of Costa A1esa." Hammett said in his Jetter. Costa Mesa city officials, who are at· tempting to acqui re-the site in coopera- tion with the county, have called for an emergency meeting Thursday mornlng with RGnald Caspers, chairman or the county Board of Supervisors, and Ken- neth Sampson, county director o[ harbors, beaches and parks. The meeting, wh ich will also be at- tended by Mayor ffammett and Fred Sorsaba.1, city, manager of Costa Mesa, ls ex11ected to·focus orl the ultimatum and a 1,Pla'n to acquire the property. Meanwhile, Assembl yman Robert fl. Burke (R-Hu ntington Beach) is pushing a bill through th e Legislature which would allow Co6ta A-tesa and the county to lease the propert yat a fee of $10 per acre, per year. · Hov.•ever. Burke said the General Services Department has made it plain that it is against any lype of lease agree- ment and Is therefore opposing the bill. City Fi1ids Way T 0. Curb ' Travel Cost-Stay Home \Vhile other Orange Coa st cities have controversies over city councilmen taking their \\'ivcs to conventions and con· ferences at city expense, Nev.•part Beach hes found a way lo avoid the problem altogether. They 're not going to send anyone al all. At the urging of t-.1ayor Donald A. !\1clnnis, councilmen f\tonday struck Sl.800 in proposed travel expenses from their 0\1'n budget. "J'iti nol going to Cevelnnd .'' pro- nounced Mcinnis. eliminating $500 for the League of Cities natiooitl con\'ention there. "And I'm not going to New Orleans,·• he added , knocking another $500 off for the Congress of Mityors meeting there. Before they ~·ere done, the council had eliminated another ~ for a trip tG Washington, D.C. for the \V,a le r Resources conference and $300 for lunches nt 1nontllly Orange County Leag ue of Cities meetings. They felt they could 11ay their ov.·n lab at the local srssions. Fro1n l'age 1 AIRPORT ... do .anything, I suppQrt it cm that OOsis alone," observed l\fayor Donald A. A1cln· ni5 . The resolution calls on Superviso rs to require all operators of jet 11iz'crafl, as well as the rederill and st a t e government. to furn ish an Insurance bond, surety bond or secured ln- dtmni£1cation agreement. with the county as beneflciary. in an "amount Adequate lo reimburse llw counly for any amounts which it finds necessary to er;:pend to compensate citizens for damages caustd by the operation of jet·po1~·ered aircraft at lhe airport." Grocer Van Hijacked SAN DlEGO (APj -A gunman JumJ>ed Into rroctr Jaek Sddndltr's van , Mori- day •! it pulled 1way from the Birb on Ille way to the bank, tied up Schindler and e caped With tho· deposit -11,100 In cash and $4,llOO In che<b, police u ld. p,...p .. eJ MINES ..• U.. harbor. It la about 1 mile Jm&, about 500 )'l rds wide and dredged to a depth or about 20 reet. Other ports on Ille target 1111 Included Hoo Gal, Cam Pha, QuM1i Kbe lllcl Dong Hol. The C.s. Command declined to disclose the type of mines med, but those available include acoustlc m int s detonined by the noise of a ship's pr~ pelle.r:s a~ lt ~sses ni?&rby, magnetic mines 1et off a ship's steel hull disrupting Lh~ tn ine's magnetic Held and contact rnlncs which detonate when hit by a ship. The mi ning <Jperation bt'gan at 9 a.m. Saig11n time, just .es President Nixon was beginnin~ his te lt!Vlsed address. The Pr"sident sa id nt1tions shipping !Upp\ies 10 North Vetnam had been notified they hav e three "daylight periods" to get their ships out of North Vietnamese ports. The notification said the mines were set to activate aulomatically· ar 3 a.m. PDT Thu rsday. President Nguyen Van Thieu welcomed the U.S. mining of North Vietnamese ports and predicted that SOuth Viet· namese forces will recapture some ter- ritory lost to enemy forces in the CW"rent offensive. Jn a speech on national radio and television tonigbt, Thieu called President Nixon's announcement •·a strong decision to show the determination of th e United States to help the South Vietnamese pro-- pi e fight con1munism." I-le said Hanoi's decision thus far has created · 650,000 civilian refugees and 25.000 civilian casualties. Thieu 'Said South Vietnamese forces had been forced to abandon territory in Quang Tri, Kontum and Dinh Dinh prov· inces because of heavy e n e m y press ure. Bul he added: "\\le will retake some territory in the coming day s. "\Ve will recapture Quang Tri, the city that we lost because of the mistakes of some leaders or under hard pressure from the enemy.'' Newp.ort Urges New Rerouti11g For Freeway I\ewport Beach t-.1ayor Donald\A. 1\1Cln· nis wants the Newport Free\vay to come to an end -on the Coast Highway in lluntington Beach. Agreeing with the idea , Newport coun- cilmen Monday night voted to send a representative to tlie May 18 meeting of the California Highway Commission lo suggest it. The council turned down a State Public Work:s Department request to forestall a deCision on proposed condominiums in the present path of the route, con. ditionally approving the 494-unit Newport Crest project unanimously. The req uest triggered Mcinnis' pro-- posal, however. The Newport Freeway is now planned to terminate at either the Pa cifi c Coast Freeway -if there ever is one -or at West Co.est Highway at the Balboa Boulevard-Superior Avenue intersection in Newport. "We ought to offer a reasonable alternative," Mcinnis observed, and then he made his. "Bring the freeway dO'A'n Superior Avenue (as planned now) to th e bluffs then swing it west (behind Newport Shores) and connect it with the Coast llighv.•ay in l·luntington Beach." J\1cinnis said Huntington Beach of- ficials have voiced no objectiGns to such a proposal. Huntington Beach Mayor Al Coen could not be reached for comment on the pro-- posal this morning. Mcinnis said the re-routing would preserve the oppo rtu nity for a future marina \~·est of Newport Shores. The condominium project. as part of appeared in a number of motion pictures the conditions for its approval, has agreed to install pipes to bring the drainage down the bluffs and will build an extension of its internal roadway lo ri.!onrovia St reel as a "rear exit.'' The project fronts on Superior Avenue, wh ich the developer , the Robert H. Grant Corporation. will widen. Councilmen Take Steps to Avert Traffic Hazard T\\•o steps toward reduc ing the accident r;ite on the hazardous Irvine Avenue ~ l'.llr\·c \1'cre taken by NewpQrl Bea ch l'Ouncil111en ?<.1onday night. They told Public \Vorks Director Joseph T. De vlin to ~'iden the inside southbound lane six feet. ' They :ilso told Devlin to hire a con- su ltant to lell the city what else to do . "\\'e'll ask him to look at three things," Devlin said, li sting : -Realignment of the curve within the existing JOO.foot city-ownf<l right"()r-way. -Total realignment, v I r tu 1 11 y strlllghttning the curve. -A compromise between the two. Jn addition to the v"idening of the one lane, which DevUn said will "provide a greater marain of trf()f ror the driver.'' the city will also move immediately to in- stall a medJan barrier. Devlin said the possiblllty of Installing 1'Botts Dots," which he calls rumble str ips. will also be reviewed when Traffic E-nglneer Robert Jaffe returns from vec:illon. '1lt wouldn't be wise to make a recom· mendatlon on thot llghUy." Devlin said. '"!'hey are very notsy and would prob- ab\y disturb nearby residents," be said. Adding that they would, h),..v.r, Sel'\" as good warning to drivers 1pproachlnc the sweeping dowftblll curve. UPI Ttl•llttl CITES DANGERS Nixon Advlur Ki1sin9er Soviet Summit Go-ahead See11 By Kissinger WASHINGTON (AP) -Dr. Henry A. Kissinger said today President Nixon realizes his latest Vietnam moves "'\Viii create short-term difficulties for Soviet leaders" but fully hopes to proceed with A-1oscow summit talks !\lay 22. Kissinger, the President's assisiant for national security affairs, said the United States received no indication from Moscow as to whether the Soviets \~·ill want to proceed with the summit. He said ''it will probably be a day or so" before fornlal reaction is rece ived. \Vhlle saying Nixon's attempt to block receipt of Soviet war supplies 16 North Vie tn amese porl ~ presents t.1oscow with difficulties, Kissinger said the Soviets •·permitted a situation that posed mas- sive difficulties for us.·· The presidential aide, who repeatedly restated an American willingness tG resume public or private peace tal ks, told .a news ' conference the Nixon ad· ~inistration "perhaps underestimated the massive influx of offensive weapons. Kissinger argued that the Soviet arms shipments tipped the military balance in Indochina in favor of Hanoi's forces. Responding lo questions, Kissinger said the Nixon moves involve "some risk." He adde<I: "The judgment was that it did not in- volve an unacceptable risk." But he conceded that only events will prove whether the presidential strategy will work. Kissinger said he would not expect the moves against Hanoi's shipping lanes to affect the batlle in South Vietnam during the next three week:s. However. he said there should be a battlefield impact beyond that point. Kissi nger said Nixon reached •his decisions "with enormous pain and great reluctance.'' He pictured his own then-secret !\1ay 2 meeting in Paris with Hanoi's Le Due Tho as having played an important par t in setting the stage for the moves Nixon announced Monday night. Six months had been spent arranging the Paris conference, he reported. But he said that his as surances to Le Due Tho that the United States is willing tG explore "every conceivable approach" toward peace were met by a restatement of a standard Hanoi line. He said: "\Vhat we heard could have been clipped from a newspaper and sent to us through the ma il." • SE RVICE 20 Indicted Forgery Network Reported Broken A flourishing forgery ring that netted up to $1.5 million by dealing in cars, l'Oins and cash has allegedly been broken by In· diclment of 20 Southlanders, including a Newport Beach man . Marshall D. llofnurtd, 32. or 1826 Port· Charles Place, Is among those named in today's announcemenl by Los Angeles COunly District Attorney Joseph P . Bu.sch . l·lofflu11d 1s among 17 men and three wor11en still sought by authorities in coo- nection with the operation that allegedly bilked businesses from San Francisai t<> the Mexiean border. Crimes charged to the defendants named in• 1ecret Grand Jury indictment include conspiracy in all cases, plus 17 counts of forgery, seven of forgery of the state seal and three counts of possession of check:s wit h intent to defraud. The mass indictment accuses the prin· cipals of -Operating a novel scheme in \Vhich they bought ne\v ca rs 'vith forged bank che<:ks, then forged dr iver's licenses used as identifi cation to re·sell them . Investigators clairn the ring may have \\'Orked as far back as September. 1970. swindling victims out of $500.000 in Los Angeles County alone. The indictme nt also claims they dealt in gold coins. diamonds and other valuables quickly converted to ready cash. "This is one of the most sophisticated operations of its kind in Los Angeles County." District Attorney Busch declared in announcing the ca!e. A dozen persons aged 51 to 71 had been taken into custody and arraigned in LOs Angeles County Superior Court or releas· ed pending juvenile court action in the minors' case as of Monday. Jay Berman, the DA's press secretary, said today he has nG idea how soon Hoff. Jund niight be arrested, adding that he is ~11vnre of the crim inal action against him. l·lofflund and fema le ccrdefendant allegedly tried to pass a $12,000 coun· terfcit cashier's check in one instance cited by Los Angeles authorities. The alleged ringleader of the operation, 'I'heodore M. Southwood. 32, of Santa J.1onica. also remains free. Investigators said the largest single Freeze Decreed On Construction _ P,encling Action There "'ill be no more building below I.he Newport Center ring road until new height limits are establlshed for the area, Newport Beach counclln1en decreed Mon· day nighl. Councilrnen took the action. wilh lrvine Con1pany endorsement, after granting l1vo building permit s for structures that will penetrate the existing 35 fcxit height limi t in block 200, behind the Newport Cinema Theater. Councilmen app1·oved peMnils ror two structu res. each about 45 feet tall. over the objections of Harbor View-Broadmoor homeo1vners who wc;nted them stopped as a le\'el to get ln•ine to negotiate on overall he ight controls. ,Former ·city manager and councilman Robeft Shelton, now a consultant with Irvine. vowed there would be no more permits asked for an~·ay but coun- cihnen \vantcd to make sure. Councilmen ordered all future building per1nits for both blocks 100 and 200 routed to them before they Me even formally received by the Community Dcvelop1nent Department. They also instructed the staff to inforn1 any exisling lessees or those vacant parcels that the action had been taken. • • • transaction charged tO the 2o alleged si·indlers \vaS ~ Feb. 7 purchase of ll c:irs from a leasing company with a tic· titious $46,200 cashier's check. New Sources Criticize Traffic Unit The citiiens' group studying Newport Beach traffic problems Monday came in for criticism frorn two freshmen city councilmen who are avowed Freeway, Fighters. The Citizens' Advisory Committee on Tr ansporlstion. com prised mostly cf ;_1 nti·free1vay residents. has been 'A'Orking for n1ore than one year \1·ilh a pald con· sultant trying to find alternatives to the c:ontro\lersial Pacific Coast Freeway proposed through the city. c..iutciln1an Pau l Ryck:of( touched off the H'asts by questioning the need for SJ>L<iding more than $i0,00l'.l for a variet y of cons ultant studies in next year's budget. "I base this on the traffic study." Ryckorr said. ''The results ci.re not too startling so far ." ·'~1r. Ryck ofl 's concern ls shared by most,'' said Couu.cilman John Store, whG cited the lack or effecttvenes1 of the transportalion _commiftee. "They will be meeting shortly to review th eir progi-ess to date," he added. He suggested that, following that meetin~ tbe • CQUncil might consider revising p,roposed approPfiatlons to the panel , now planned at $30,000 for the 1972· 13 fiscal year. ··r.'laybe th ey can get by with what has been allocated, maybe less or more," Store said. Newport Orders Balboa Island Height Hearin~ Newport Beach councilmen Mondar ordered the planning commisaion to con· duct public hearings OJ1 I ,plan-to limit density on Balboa Island. 4 The basis for the hearings would be an ordincince proposed by Councilman Paul RyckOff which \Yould prohibit duplexes on the island and encourage landowners to build single-family dwell ings with garage apartments: If enacted by the commission and the council. ihe ordinance would create a new R-1 1'2 zoning district. "The ordinance \\'OUld establish 1 -height lirn it ;lnd \\'OUld stop three.story construction," Ryckofr said. "The limit would be at the 20.foot plate line with a six·foot parapet or peak: above that point." ''This would also provide reslrictiona on the square footage of the second story." he added. "It avoids stacked duplexe s. "The ordinance would allow plenty of room for a sizeable home. with a gar~ge apartment of 600.800 sqollre ·feet," Ryck:off said. Ryckoff said his talk with the Balboa Island tmprovement Association seeme4 lo show they arP. "wholeheartedly behind the manuevtr." "This law could de applied to any are11 of lhe clty. but it Is designed for Balboa Island." he added. How Much Is It Worth? • ,, ' In tho carpel business sometimes Its worth EVERYTHING! Hardly a day goes by that we don't get a call regarding another company's poor installation. Occasionally the damage resulting from poorly sewn seam• or taped seams is not repairable. Then the value of the investment looks pale indeed! Why pay $300.00 or $1500.00 for carpeting and gamble with tho installation? r We maintain all of our own crows. all taught the ONLY way lo in- stan carpe_ling-the 'RIGHT way! The 9r;1test mojority of our b.usinoss is relerrol. There is 1 reason! ALDEN"S C~RPETS • DRAPES . 1663 Plac•ntia Ave. COSTA MfSA 646-4838 • I • I I • • 7 ' l v Or has Boa cou po be f dolla Ku viso. llOt It Strl peel feder aeized worth tured Inv T N H ougge Tiie Works declsio the pr dition Crest The posal, The to ter Freew West Boulev in New "We alteroa be ma 1'Bri Avenue then Shores Highw c t.m. >In M Teday'11 Final N.Y.. Stoek8 VOL. 65 , NO. 130, 3 SECTIONS, +4 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, MAY 9, 1972 c TEN CENTS Report Prepared on Airport Nuisance S,uits By JACK BROBACK Of 1111 o.lly l"li.1 Sl•H Orange County Counsel Adrian Kuyper has prepared a confidential report to the Board of Supervi!Ors reviewing recent court actions regarding operation of air· ports and possible lawsuits which could J>e filtd and might run into billions of dollars. JCuyper's report was· delivered to super. \llso<'t' offices Monday evening and has ltOt yet been discussed by the board. It ~ believed, how~ver, that the re- • port states that current lawsuits against Orange County in reference to jet op. erations at Orange County Airport are based on inverse condemnation (loss of property value) and that the recent state Supreme Court decision which sanctions lawsuits based on public nuisance wiU not apply unless the $28 million in com- plaints filed by residents of Newport Beach are amended. Daniel Emory, chairman of the New- port Beach anti airport noise committee. stated last week that attorneys for the committee are studying the lawsuits filed to determine if they should be amended to cover public nuisance. In bis confjdenUal report, Kuyper is a1so believed to have advised board mem- bers that it the local lawsuitJ are so amended he will recommend that the two ~mmerclal airline operators at the county aio»rt -Air California and Hughes Alrwest -should be brought into the action as crOS! defendant.!. Kuyper, it ls said, did 11ot express great alarm over the Supreme Court de- Police Grab Heroin Aid Federal Agents in Seizing Suspects By ARTiruR R. VINSEL Of tl11 CMlty Piltl Still Striking swiftly to intercept an unex- pected shipment, Costa Mesa police and federal narcotics agents claim they seized 39 ounces of high-grade heroin worth ,250,(XK) Monday night and cap- tured ail suspected smugglers. Jnvesiigators claim the potent opiate \Vas distributed to Orange County addicts through legitimate business fronts in· eluding two Mexican cafes, the Pink Ap- ple Produce Company and a glass firm. One suspect booked into city jail early today, as a result, was no stranger to the premises. He won the contract in 1967 to install jail safety glass and other Costa Mesa Westminster Pair Slwt To Death on Doorstep By TERRY COVILLE Of lhs o.1,., Jtiftot Staff A Westmi.n!ter couple were shot to death early this: rooming on the doorstep of their home, apparently as they return· ed from a nJght out. Police sa id Frank Marcus Schiavone, 41, and his wife, Shirley Rine Schiavone, 44, were both ghot in the back as th~y stepped through the doorway of their home at 6202 Choctaw Drive. Their bodies were discovered by their 11-year-old 10n, Steven, who was asleep In his bedroom, but woke up when he heard the shots, police said. One neighbor said he heard the muffled shots about 2:20 a.m., looked out bis win- dow and saw a medium built, lightly clothed man running around the comer of the Schiavone home. Police investigators said they have no theory yet on why the double murder was committed. The murder weapon has not been found . Schiavone, a pressman for t.ht 1..-0ng {See ~1URDERS, Page !) Newport Council Suggests Halting Freeway in Beach Newport Beach Mayor Donald A. Mcin- nis wants the Newport Freeway to come to an end -on the Coast Highway in Huntington Beach. Agreeing with the idea, Newport coun- cllmen Monday night voted to send a representative to the May 18 meeting of the C8llfomia Highway Commission to suggest it. Tbe council turned down a State Public Works Department request to forestall a declsion on proposed condominiums in the present path of the ~ute, con-- ditionally approving the 494-unit Newport Crest project U(l&Pimously. The request triggered Afclnnis' pro- posal, however. Mclnnis said Huntington Beach of. ficiels have voiced no objections to such a proposal. Huntington Beach Mayor Al Coen could not be reached for comment on the pro- posal this morning. Mcinnis gaid the re-routing would preserve the opportunity for a future marina west of Newport Shores. The condominium projectt as part or appeared in a number of motion pictures the conditions for its approval , has agreed to install pipes ta bring the drainage down the bluffs and will build an ex.tension of its internal roadway to l\.1onrovia Street as a "rear exit ." The project fronls on Superior Avenue, which the developer, the Robert H. Grant Corporation, will widen. Police Facility windows, narcotics delec· tives notect. \ The arrestees taken into custody at their firm s and homes about IO p.m. were scheduled for arraignment today be!ore a U.S. Commissioner in Los Angeles. No bail was to ~ set until they were formally brought be!ore-the bench on charges of violating federal narcotics laws. AgentJ of the Federal Bureau cf Nan:otics and Dangerous Drugs (BNOO) stlud sport stdana btloilg!ng to the suspects in a raid at El Comedor Mex- icano, a cafe at 11765 Edinger Ave., Fountain Valley. A truck UJed by Pink Apple Produce Company and aUegedly used to .nnuggle the killer drug in from Mexico was alao impounded as evidence. Arrestees include Albert G. Ellsworth, 44 , or 9462 Waterfront Drive, Huntington Beach ; Paul E. Aragon, 36, and his nephew Annando ~. Ramirez, 19, both of 8392 Danbury Circle, Huntington Beach: John L. De LaTorre, 241 of 11050 Centa Circle, Garden Grove; Paul Lovato, 21, o{ 2012 Rose Lane, Orange, and Pedro V. Hernandez, 52, of 4101 Sixth St., Santa Ana. Costa Mesa Narcotics Detail Sgt. John Regan said the six were associated in • several firms. They include El eome<)or Mexicana, El Valle Restaurant, 13041 Main St., Garden Grove ; De La Torre Landscaping, the produce firm and American Balboa Glass Company, 1617 Placentia Ave ., Costa Mesa. The glass firm is owned by Ellsworth, who employed one of the other five suspects in the police facility window in-- stallation . · "They were using these businesses as fronts ," Sgt. Regan charged today. He said his men initiated the in- vestigation five months ago and included BNDD agents due to the scope of the alleged heroin smuggling and di3tribution ring in Orange and Los Angeles counties. "They were dealing in 50 percent pure heroin," Sgt. Regan alleged, saying this is extremely potent. "It got down to where we were buying It by the pound," he 1dded. ''The actual amount of money involved Is classified information, but the federal government Spent thousands of dollaMJ," the veteran narcotics detective declared. Teams including Sgt. Regiln , detectives Norm Kutch and Don C&sey, plus BNOO personnel cattied out the raids on short (S.. HEROIN, Page 21 cision which was based on a ruling by a Los Angeles County Superior Court con- cerning Santa Monlca Afuniclpal Airport . He is said to have noted that in su ch iegat actions the nuisance factor would have to be proved i.n court. • Kuyper is said to have referred lo a statement by city attorney Roger •Ame- bergh .of Los Angeles that Los Angeles International Airport should be closed down unless airlines and the federal gov- ~mment protect the city from claims losses or damaees resulting from Jet op- erations. Kuyper, however, is believed to have made oo reference to a statement last week by Newport Beach City Councilman Milan Dosta1 in which he suggtsted that Orange County Airport be shut down If guarantffs "are not put up by airlines in > reason8ble period of time, 30 to to days." · • • Kuyper is u id to have pointed out county regulations alfecting nighla by Air Cal and Airwest which limit hours of • CHINA 0 1&0 Mill& u,, ...._.. MAP INDICATES SEA AND RAIL LINKS ORDERED CUT President Movt1 to Hilt North Vietnam War Suppllo Newport Bac~s Plan For Closing Airport A resolution calling ror Orange County supervisors lo close Orange County Airport within 60 days unless airlines guarantee to cover the $30 million homeowners want in noise lawsuits waa adopted by Newport Beach councilmen Monday night. On a 6 to 0 vote, with Councilman Paul RyckoCr abstaining without comment, they said they want the airlines to post bonds or other fina ncial guarantees to cover the dollar amount of the suits "to protect the taxpayers of the county of Orange." Councilman Milan Dostal introduced the resolution, pointing out that a California Supreme Court decision haa opened the way for judgments against publicly owned airports on the grounds or nuisance and inconsistency in zoning. Previously, suits were allowed only on the basis of hard-t<Hletermine deprecia- tion of property v,alues. ••trs a whole new ball game as far as the legal issues are concerned,'' Dostal observed. He pointed out that a almilar threat by Los Angeles to shut down its in-- ternational airport i1 no more than an at· tempt to get the California Legislature to get cities and counties excluded from any responsibility. "They hope to stampede t h e Legislature into action," Dostal said. He said his proposal is different in that it attempts to put the responsi bility for damages "on the polluters, themselvea, '1 meaning the air carriers who use the •lrporl. "Ut them lndemnlfy so residents won 't have to pay," Dostal aaid. "If they don't do this, then the county .should suspend all jet operations," he aaid. f.ouncilman Carl Kymla expressed reluctance in casting hl! vote Jor the resolution. The Newport Freeway is now planned to terminate at either the Pacific coast Freeway -if there ever is one -or at West Coast Highway at the Balboa Boulevard-Superior Avenue intersection In Newport. "We ought to offer a reasonable alternative," Mcinnis observed, and then he made his. Mesa Asks for More Time "I hope lhis resolution will not jmpair or be a detriment to recent discussions on getting the airport mov.ed," he aai d. "If this 8ction in any way speeds up actions on the part of the Supervisors to do anything, I support u ~on that basis , alone,'' observed Mayor Donald A. Mein· nis. "Bring the freeway down Superior Avenue (as Planned now) to the bluffs then swing It west (behind Newport Short!) and connect it with the Coast Highway in Huntington Beach.11 CALL MAYOR BETWEEN B, 9 Do )'OU need to dl!<UJS city bualnes.s with the mayor of Cost.I Mesa? He ts available from 8 a.m. to 9 1.m. Monday throllgb Frld•y In his >lOce 1t city ba.11, 77 Fair Drive. Mayw. J1ck Hammell s 1 I cl J'qyone who wishes to talk tn him :luring those hours ma y make '" 1ppolnlln<nt by calling 834-5213. • • Mayor Says 30 Days Not Enougli for Park , By RUDI NIEDZIEUIKI •-• Of tilt O.Uy Pitt! Sflft Costa Mesa Mayor Jack Hammett to- day asked the state General Services Department to Allow city oflicials more time to develop a ph1n for the acquisition of 157-acres of state surplus property for Falrview Park. A 30-day time llmlt, Jiammett said. makes It "fiscally impossible" to work out a i>urcbase plan for the property behind Estancia High School In Cost> Mesa. In a letter to Lawrence Robinson. dlrector of General Services, lfammett said, ''If we are considering a bond elec- tk>n In November, we tnust ta.lc.e aclJons for that detennlnation QOw. "Tl ls obvious that it would ~ an Im· poulbility for two public entitles such as U.. ctty of Costa Men and the Counly of Orange to even meet and commence the legal procedures, as well as in- tergovernmental negotiations, within the time limit giveg to us by the Public Works Board." 41 At a public hearing a week ago, the State Public Works Board delayed disposal of a 46.5-acre portion of the park site to 1 private developer under the con- dJUon that Iocal plans to acquire the overall acreage be prestnled before its June ,5 meettog. 1be »day period of grace was follow· ed by A demand from Robin son \hat Costa Mesa bacl: Ila eommltment to the park by agreeln& to 1 $4 million purchase price lor the property. Hammett said lhat the June 5 deadline ''emasculates'' the poS1ibillty or Costa Mesa to complylnl with the demand, especiaUy since no fundl are Immediately ·~ Sorsabal, city manager of Costa r-tesa, is avall8ble for outright purchase. "We have no objection to the general tenor or the propoul, but do object to the finality and the lime llmltl lmpostd, and 11!0 the lacl: of opportunity to negotiate a proposition which would be of beneflt to the state, county and the city of C.Osta Mesa /' Hammett said in his letter. Costa Atesa city officials, who are at. tempting to acquire the site In coopera· Uon with the county, have called for an emergency meeting Thursday morning with Ronald Caspers, chairman of the 1county Board or Supervisors. and Ken- neth Sampson, county director of harbors , beaches and parks. Tht meeting, which wUI alto be at· lended by Mayor Hamm•tt and Fred erpocted to locw on lbe ultimatum and a (slt P'AIRVIP, Pap I) The resolution calls on Supervltors to require all operators of jet aircraft, as well as the federal and 1 tat e government , to furnl$b an insurance bond,, turety bond or secured in- denuilllcatlon agretment, with the county as beneficiary, ln an "amount adequate to rtlmburse the county for any 1mount1 which It finds necasary to upend to • compen,ate citizens for damages caused by the operation of Jtf..powtred aircraft at tbt 1111><>rt." Precaution Failed SA.'I DIEGO CAP) -The expl .. lon Sunday ol Apollo II command ship gas fumes occurred durhlg a new gaftty ~ ctdure taken by the National Space Agency, 1 NASA spokesman said Mon· day. Tht> expl1>1ion during defueling In • bln~ar 1t North bland N1v11 Air Station 1eOt lbr1poel-lite ... 1ar lbrouil> tho 1ir: - • optratlon, mandate night patterns to ayoid flying o\'er home artas and others \\'hich he snld were plus (actors in favor of the county in any legal action. He is also said lo h.a\•t mentioned the county's noise monitoring program f1. vorably. The attorney ls aiso believed to have nottd that the Air Cat contract now ln force calls for strict regulation of fl!!~" and patterns and that similar restrld ons could be written into the new Alrwest contra ct now under nt'gotl1tion. 60 Vessels, 350 Planes · Take Part SAIGON (AP) -Th• blgg"t U.S. air nnd naval !ask force ever assembled In Vietnam began min ing the entrances lo Haiphong and other North Viei'namese p:trts today and heavily bombarded railroads and highweys In North Viet· nam. The U.S. Command reported one Nort h RELATED STORIES PAGES 3 AND 4 TODAY Vietnamese MIG jet 1hot down darllll the mining operation, the st~enth MTG" reported downed Cn four days. The command aald the Initial phases of the blockade announced by President Nixon Monday night "have been suc- cessfully accompllshed" and the Navy planes that dropped the delayed-action mines to aeal off the enemy's harborg aU returned safely to their carriers. But the commander of a cruiser- destroyer Ootllla in the Tonkin Gulf, Rear Adm. Rembrandt C. Robinson , was killed Monday night and his chief of sta ff and his operations officer were missing when their helicopter developed engine trouble and cruhed as they were trying to land aboard the cruiser Provldtnce. Roblnson, 47, was the firat admira l to die In the Vietnam war. The Navy 1ald It marshaled a force or at Jeaat eo ships -including five aircraft carriers wlth 350-400 warplanea, four ct'filsers and 30 destroyers -to mine alt entrances to North Vietnamese ports, lo cut ofr the delivery ot war materials thl'(lugh the terrltorlal waters of Nortb Vietnam, and l<l sever rail and other communication lines as hore. ~tore ships were on the way, Including the carrier Saratoga from the Atlantic Fleet. She waa expected within a week. The 7th Air Force has more than 500 strike plant& nyln8: from bases io Thailand and South Vietnam. U.S. Command spokesmen sai d air strikes continued over North Vietnam to- day. They gave no details of the day'• operations but said atlacks In the North nearly doubled during the past week to an average of about 200 strikes a day. American planes returned to the Hanoi area Monday for the first tlme In three weeks. 1be aerial mining or Haiphong ctn- tered on a narrow channel called the Canal ~faritlme which wai; dredged into (See MINES, Pa1e 21 We•t•er Skies will be fair e.1etpt for early morning low clouds. Highs should range from 69-72 wllh the Iowa from 53-58. INSIDE TODA.l' Tht mining to1on of ldria tDill thut down at tJ1t t nd of school;" it1 120-vear hi3tof1J e11dl11 a in concern over t coluQIJ and pollu. tion. Stt Storv, Page 12. L.M. It.,. I t-1111t111I• I Cltnllltf 11 •11 Cf111tc:1 • II Crfllwe"' II Dt•ltl fllilnk" t '""'"'' ,... . l.1tl•l•l-1 U ''-MCAI 1 .. 11 '" ftl9 lldtf I ...,...... u 4'! L•._ ~u • Mtwttt It MlllMal Pllllll• II Mlll1119I lliJWI 4 °''""' c..,..,, . ' ~' ,...,. ... ;t:i T .. tvltitoll 11 T'M•rtt• If '#Nllltr 4 Wlll!t Wl\11 II ._.,.., ,..,... la·l• . ., ... ....., -.. Z DAILY •ILOT c President Subpoenaed Nixon , Brother, Columnist in Hughes Flap Jtughts Loat1," an 1ttoroey uys. NORWALK (AP~ -Subpoenas have bffn lssul!d for President Nixon. his brolher Donald or Ne"A'port Beach, lfowanl Hughes, columnist J a ck Anderson and former Hughes aldc Noah Dietrich in a la w~it challenging the \'alidlty of a book entitled "The Nixon· Altomty J. Kimball Walker of Norwalk said he n~eded to take depositions to prove slatements in the book. Walker represents the author. Nicholas North· Broome, and I.he publisher, Cyrano Books. A spokesman for the Lot Anleles Cow>- ty Superior Court More confirmed today that the subpoenas had betn authorized by lhe court, wh.ich he described as a for mality perforn1ed by the court clerk. lie sa id any attorney hil.'I the po .... ·er lo cb- tain subpoenas for :iny person he chooses. San Clemente Man Denies ~speed' Charge; Trial Set The alleged manufacturer or large amounb of the illicit drug "speed" (methamphetamiineJ in a posh San C.1emente residence has pleaded Innocent of the charges and will appear at a preliminary hearing May 22. In the meantime , police have begun a search ror a new susptct in the major case. The latest dispatches name a Laguna Beach mun wanted under a '50,000 warrant. George William Cor. 29, arrested early last week at hls home at 4105 Calle Abril. in Harbor Estate!!, remains in custody under SS0,000 bail lo await h I 11 prellminary hearing later this month in South Orange County Munic ipal Court. Cox was arrested by a dozen agent s Councilmen Take Steps to Avert Traffic Hazard Two steps toward red ucing the accident rate on the hazardous Irvine. Avenue S.. curve were taken by Newport Beach coun cilmen Monday night. Tbey told Public \Vorks Director .Josep h r . Devlin to widen the inside south bound lane six feet. They al§-0 told Devlin to hire a con- sultant to tell the city what else lo do. "We'll ask hlm to look al three things," Devlin said, llsting: -Realignment of the curve within the existing l~foot city-owned right-<>!-way. -Total realignment, v i r t u a 11 y straightening the curve. -A compromise between the two. Jn addition to the widening of the one lane, which Devlin said will "provide R greater margin of enor for the driver," the dty wiµ also move immediately to in· stall ;i, med.Jan barrier. DeYliD said the possibility of inst.ailing "Bolfl Dot.,," which he calls rumble strlpa, will also be reviewed when Trarnc Engineer Roberl Jaffe returns rrom vacation. ''It wouldn't be wi~e to make a recom- mendation on that lightl y," Devlin said. "They are very noisy and would prob- ably disturb nearby residents," he said. adding that they would, however, serve as good warning to drivers approachi ng the sweeping rlownhill curve. Mr. Bilderback Rites Thursday Funeral services for W i 11 i a m Bilderback. a Costa Mesa plumber ror 38 years. will be held Thursday at 2 p.m. in the Bell Broadway Chapel, Costa Mesa. Visitation is Wednesday from 9 a.m. to I p.m. at the chapel. i\fr. Bilderback. 60, lived at 2257 Colgate Drive. Cosla t.·lesa. lie died ~aturday. The Re v. James Pirrcey will off iciate at the services. and a fedt'ral narcotics bureau field chemi st. Officers allege the man who holds a colJege degree in molecular biology was producing major quantitjes ol the strong drug in a garag aboratory ouUitted with expensive ge . '"The street value of monthly pro- ducti on, agent! said, w s about $28,000. While officers declined lo identifv the suspect still al l<1rgc, the. man is alleged lo have had a major role in the distrihu- tion or the new drug from a Laguna Beach house. Cox, the father of an infant. has listed his occupation as student and parl·lime house p.ciinter. Complaints against him charge lhc manufacture of restricted, dan ge rous drugs and possession of melham- phetamine ing redients. It was those alleged raw materials, said effictf'!, which led to the three- month investigation leading to the arrest. Federal agents watching drug ship- ments became suspicious when they allegedly learned that Cox assertedly was ordering large quantities or mat~rl_al_s which are used to manufacture the 1l11c1t drug. Mesn Plan,ners Delay A pproval Of Gas Pu1np The Costa ~1esa Planning Commission T\1onday night delayed its first gas pump application since a "mo ratorium·· on the construction of new service stations went into effect last week. Although the term has been carefully avoided by city officials, the application by 7-Eleven Stores was held in abeyance until the study has been completed. By taking the action, members of lhe five-man commission made it clear that other servlce 5lation applications would be similarly h<indlcd during the tu•o- month period. Market ofrlcials had \\'tinted to try out a ne\v concept by Installing self-service pumps at the store on the corner of Placentia Avenue and Victoria Street. The zone exceptio n request .... ·ill hr brought back bc(ore the comn1ission after planning department star~ mernbers have had a thoro ugh look at the city's service s1ation needs. Fro1n P11ge 1 FAIRVIEW ... plan to acquire the properly. Meanwhile. Assemblyman Robert J-J. Burke (R-Huntington Beach) is pushing a bill through the Legis lature which would ~1110\v Costa i\lesa and the county to lease lhc proper! ya! a fee of $10 per acre. per year. However, Burke said !he General Services Department ha s ntade it plain that it L<i against any type of lease ,1grec!- men t and is therefore opposing the bill. Cites CIA The subpoenas. which direct the Presi· dent to appear at 2 p.m. on ~1ay 18 and ffu ,11hes at 10 i .m. on May 19, must be ser\cd upon a person before thty art en- forceable in court. The court sp:ikesman said none of the subp()(!na s v.·as recorded as ha\"ing been SCr\'cd. The subpoenas stem from a class·ac- tion suit filed last -...·eek by Victor 1'. Schaub of \Vest Los Angeles. v.'ho describes himself as a ~gal re.searcher. He asked an injunction to block di,tribut ion and sale nf the book, con. tending it endangered free elections and national security and violated truth·in- packaging laws. A hearing on the injunction request was set for Juoe 7. Walker said the subpoenas were "not in any way an intenUon that the parties under subpoena would appear at the hearinf!S." Walker .said. ''Belter people than T have tried lo serve lloward llu~hes," a billionaire recluse reportedly living in Vancouver. B.C. '"I !eel v.'e would be obll~ed to give the subpoe na to Mr. Nixon personally. rat her th<in attempt to se rve it through his staff. since he is being asked to give a depo~i· tion as a private citizen. not as Presi· dent." the attorney said. The book deals u·ith <I $205.000 loan made by Hughes to the Nixon family 16 years ago:" ft c!j'.lims the loan was "illegal and unethlcal." Scf\aub said he has no connection with any of the principals in the case. From P ttf/C 1 MINES ... the harbor. Jt is about a mile Jong, about 500 yards wide and dredged to a depth of abou t 20 feet. Oiher port s on the target list included !·Ion Gai , Cam Pha, Quang Khe and Dong Hoi. The U.S. Command declined to disclose the type of mines used, but those available include acoustic m i n es detonated by the noise of a ship's pro- pellers as it passes nearby, magnetic mines set off a ship's steel hull disrupting the mine's magnetic field and contact mines which detonate when hit by a ship. The mining operation began at 9 a.m. Saigon time, just as President Nilton \\'as beginning his televJsed address. The 'President _,said nations shipping supplies to North.A'etnam had been nolili!d they have three "daylight periods" to get their ships out of North Vietnamese parts. The notification said the mines were set lo activate automatically at 3 a.m. PDT Thursday. President Nguyen Van Th ieu \Velcomed the U.S. mining of North Vietnamese ports :ind predicted 1hat South Viet· namese forces vt'ill recapture some ter· ritory lost lo enemy forces in the cur rent offensive. Jn a speeth on national radio and televisiot1 tonight, Thieu called J>rcsident Nixon's announcement "a strong decision tfl sho1v the deter:minatlon of the United States to help the South Vietnamese ~ pie fight communism." He sald Hanoi's decisi on thus fa r has crented 650,000 civilian refugees and 25.000 civilian casualties. 'l"h1c.11 said South Vietnamese forces had be1'n forced to abandon territory in Quang 'fri, Kontum and Binh Dinh prov~ inces because or heavy e n e m y pressure. But he added: "\\'e 1\·ilJ r~take some 1crrltory in the coming days . ··we will recapture Quang Tri. the city that we lost because of the mistakes of !iome leade rs or under hard pressure from !he enemy,"' !\1r. Bilderback is survived by hi s wife, Huth: two sons. Charles and Bill. Costa ~1esa; t-...·o daughiers. Joyce LeBeau. 29 Palms; Barba ra Bergeron, Sonoma; lather, Ben Bilderback, ?o.lissouri; tv.·o brothers; Charles of ?o.1issourl; Lyman of Illinois: and three sis ters, Junnlta Stromatt of Nevada; Virgie--Laxton and Xathryn ?-.Jorgan, both or Missouri. Gravel: Secret Papers OlANGI COAST DAILY PILOT Th• Ort!WI• Co.<111 OAll ~ PILOT. wit~ whtc~ b comblflCll tl>t Nt w1.Pr"'I•, k pullillhct rty Ir•• Ort "O': Cotti Pllflll1hlfl9 (Ofl\l»f'IV, StM• ''"' fllll-'" PUOI""""· M-•V t11rovo11 Fr.61y. for CO.I• Mtot. t-11wporl ll~c~, H1m1,n~11>n fltMl'l,Foun.~in V•llfV L•1>un~ •••~"· tnol...i S~IW.c~ •nc:I Sin ci.rn...111 S•n J111n (,opislrt.,a, ,-. •lnQI• reolCJ<.11 O'Cl•!•o" " rivlllilr.l'd S1tu1~1y1 '"' Swfld•v-. 1nt iwlnctpel 111111111r.l110 i>ltn! h •t l>CI W~t 11.,, Strffl, Cotti Mbl. C1l!lom•1. •hil•. ~ob1rt N. w,,d J'lttidcnt Ind l'11DUa.lltr J1c~ ~. Cwtl•y Vote l'rnl(l1n1 •net Gtn-tr-tl M•!'ll9fr lhorn•1 k••vlr E•ltof 111011111 A. Murphi~ Mtfllrllnt Editor Chtrfet H. Leet l ich1r4 • N•ll Aui11t111 MlllolOinq t4it0t1 C•hl M ... Offk• l JO W•1t l1y Str11t M1 ili11t AJJ,.11: ,.0. 101 I flO, 92,lll ....... .._ HtwPOtl IMCll: lUJ NtwPOrt lout1w111f L~ 1"9dl: m 11..-.. 1 ,1,v..,..,. Hll'\1 ......... ltlldl ~ 11'JJ IMtl'I ...... ...,,,.. s..n Cll""""••i as "°'"' 11 C.l'lllnt 11: .. 1 , .. .,.... 17141 '4J-4J21 C~ A'""'81'1t '42·S671 <otrrlot11. lt1l. on,.. c:..o "11ti11~11111t '°""""''· Ht -. UOO'lft. m111tr1rlt1\t, ldftwk) ftlltltl' et fOY"1tMINrlh Wt/11 _, .. ~ •llhovl .,.... ,.,.. ~.-., e.,.,.....r __,., J«l9l'llli flMt ~ N lril M C.11 .V-. Ol"1tnl16, fillllllctlltiefl lit' u""" n..u "*'W.1 llor 111111 a .11 "*"1tllr1 tl'lti1.,.., .. ,~·-..... """'"""· Opposed M:h1ing Ports \\'A S}!INGTON (UPf) -Srn. J\1ike (;ravel ( 0-Alaska) released secret· docu- 1ncnfs loday showing lha f lhe Cenrrnl lnlcll lgrncl' Agency ad1 Jlit'd President Nixon Jn 1969 that nl ining North \'iet. n:in1C'S<• ports :ind bombing mnjor rail :1rll'r1cs \\'a~ an unworkable military ;JC· !inn. · .... Grarel rend lo the Senate porlions of a national se<"urlly memorRndum in which the S!:ite Department. lhC' CIA'1nd lhe . office of the S(!(retary or Defense advised against atte1npting to interdict suppli«?s entering North Vietnam by land and sea. The CIA study which Gravel read said mining the harbors would not work be- cause supply ships could anchor oul!lde the mined areas, and send in supplies to the porls in shallow draft vessels. The CIA said the "multiplicity of modes ol transport routes" in Kort h Vleln"m made it unlikely thol BS2s and U.S. Na~·· al forces reuld shut off lhe no1\' of military supplits Into Vietna1n. Gra\"el SA id. In addition. th<' CJA \\as pc.sslinist!C' about lhf' impact of interdicting raJJ lines. In one instance, It noted. a rail· road brid3e was de!troyed by U.S. air· Power and the North Vietnamese wtre still abte lo moYe 700 t·ons: a day across the river by vse of 1 ferry . The State Department study said "in practical terms, ll would be lmpos1ible. lo mine the harbors Ix-cause North Vie.1- n:un had so many ports suilab:e for oft. lhr·beach Joarting." Afler Thl' President'~ speech ri.1onday nigh t, lh~ PcnlagDn \\':lrned that if the .So1·Jc1 t.:n lon ancl orhcr ~upp!iers of \\"Pti pons lo f.f.q noi lri<'d lo u•1lo!lcl !heir fre1[!hlcr!>· off-~ho rE>. !hf' United Srates v.•ould al!empt to sin~ the .~hal!ow-dra.rt liqh t('rs carrying goods fron1 there to shor('. The Office of the Set'retary of Oeff'nse. Gravel s.~id. concluded that a minimum of 6.000 11itack sorties a mont h would be required to clGSe lh(' 111·0 rail liJ1tl~ from <.:hina and the interdiction of lh'e 7 to 10- route rv.1d network Crom China would be still more dlffirult. ''Thus it is not po~sible ~o give a def~ inite answer to the question of how much more essential imports could come into North Vietnam If se:t imports art denied and ~ stron,cr air campaign fs Initiated." thr study said . Gravel SAld the papers ht re11d showtd that the ·•entire intC'.lllgence 11:atherin,1t system of the United Slates'' was against a blockade. The study Gravtl read from is tn- lltlt"d National Security Study ~femornn­ rlum No, 1. It was prep11rf!d under the direction ot Dr. !Jenry Kissinger. the President's chief foreign policy ad viser, at the outset Of the Nixon admlnlstration. Several newspaper! have pobDshed portion• of the ml!!morandum , bat not - aC"COrdinlJ to Gravel -the parts about b~ockndlng that ht! read today. \11'1 ., .... ,. CITES DANGERS • Nixon Adv iMr Ki11ingtr Soviet Summit Go-ahead Seen By Kis singer WASHINGTON (AP) -Dr . Henry A. "Kissinger said today President Nixon realizes his latest Vietnam moves "will create short-term difficulties for Soviet leaders" but fully hopes to proceed with Moscow summit talks f\.tay 22. Kissinger, the President's assistant for national security .Ifairs, said the United Slates received no indication from ri.·loscow as to whe ther the Soviets will want lo proceed with the summit. He said "i t v.·iJl probably be a pay or so" before formal reaction is received. While saying Nixon's attempt to block receipt or Soviet v.•ar supplies to North Vietnamese ports presents ~1oscow wit h difficulties, Kissinger said the Soviets •·permitted a situatiQn that posed 01as-- sive difficulties for us." The presidential aide, who repeatedly restated an American willingness to resume public or private" peace talks, told a news conference the Nixon ad- ministration ''perhaps ~nderestimated lhe massive influx of offensive weapons . Kissinger argued that the Sovie t arms shipments tipped the military balance in Indochina in fa vor of Hanoi's forces. Respanding to questions. Kissinger said the Nixon moves involve "some risk." He added : "The judgment was that it did not in· volve an unacceptable risk. 0 But he conceded that only events will prove whether the presidential strategy will work. Kissinger said he would not expect the moves against Ha noi's shipping Janes to affect the battle in South Vietnam during the next three weeks. However, he said there should be a battlefield impact beyond that point. Kissi nger said Nixon reached his decisions ''with enormous pain and great reluctance." He pictured his own then-secret May 2 meeting in Paris with Hanoi's Le Due Tho as having played an important part in setting the stage for the moves Nixon anno unced Monday night. Six months had been spent arranging the Paris conference, he reported. But he said that his assurances to Le Due Tho that the United States is willing to expl ore "every conceivable approach" toward peace were met by a restatement of a standard Hanoi line. He said : "What v.·e heard could have been clipped from a newspaper and sent lo us through the mail." ' , 20 ltadicted Forgery Network Reported Broken A nourishing forgery ring tl)al netted up to $1.5 million by dealing in cars, coins and cash has allegedly been broken by in- di ctment or 20 Southlanders, including a Newport Beach man. Ma.rshall D. HofOund. 32. of 1826 Port Charles Place. is among those named in today's i"lnnouncement by Los Angelf'~ County District Attorney Joseph P. Busch. Hofflund is among 17 men and three 'vomen still sought by authorities in con· nection u•ith the operation lhat allegedly bilked businesses from San Francisco lo -· the Mexican border. Crimes charged to ' the defendants named in a secret Grand Jury indictment include conspiracy in all cases, plus 17 counts of forgery, seven of forgery of the state sea) and three cowtts of possession of checks with intent to defraud . The mass indictment accuses the prin· cipals of operating a novel scheme in \Vhich they bought new cars 'vith forged bank cheeks. then forged driveris licenses used as ide ntification to re·seU them. Investigators claim the ring may ha\•e worked as far back as September. 1970, swindling victims out or $500.000 in Los An.~eles County alone. . The indict ment also cla ims they dealt ln gold coins, diamonds and other \•aluables qui ckly converted to ready cash. "This is one of the most sophisticated From Pagel MURJ)ERS ... Beach Independent Press-Telegram, -was shot in the back while his wife was hit in the head and in the back, by an as ye t unknown caliber of bullet. police said. The couple \\'ere apparently shot fr om out side, police ex-plained, and their bodies \\·ere str etched across the open doorway u·hen Steven found therp. A neighbor. Peter Garland. described the Schiavones as "good people". He said they have a son. John. in Burbank, and anothe r son. Richard, \\'ho was weunded two weeks ago in Vietnam. Anot her neighbor. Joe Maher, added : "There·s a numb shock y:hen you hear something like this. The w h o I e neighborhood is worried." Police investigators spent the day searching the house and yard for the weapo n or weapons and any other si gns of what happened. The boy. Steven, attends Finley School ln the \Veslminster school district. He telephoned police after discovering the bodies of his parents. The Schiavone ho me is in a housing tract called ''Indian Village'' in northwest Westminster. near the San Dlego J•reeway. From Pagel HEROIN ... not"ice "·hen notified of an incoming ship- ment . "We didn't e:<pecl ii to go so soon r" he remarked. Investigators said Hernandez was armed u•ith a revolver but made no at- tcn1pt to resist when placed under arrest. "\Ve used just about every type of sophisticated detection method dur ing this case, includJng plain old-fashioned legv:ork," Sgt. Regan said in announcing j t. "Our helicopter played an especially big role in surv eill ance." Va lue of the 39 ounces seized ri..1onday night u·ould be about $31.200 wholesale and up to $250.000 after it was cut with other compounds such as milk sugar for street sales. ' ' operations or its kind m Los Anaeles County." District Attorney Dus c h declared In announcing the case. A dozen persons agtd. 51 to 71 ha d been tak en into custody and arraigned ln Los Angeles County Superior Court or releas· ed pending juvenile court action In the n1inors' case 11s of ~Tonday . J:1~· Bern1an . the J)A'!i pr1•ss secretary, said 1oct11y he has no lde:i ho1~ soon Horr. tund 111ighl be arrested, addin g Iha! he is a•\•are of the criminRI action against him. Hofllund and remale L'O·defendant allegedly tried to pass a $12,000 court-- terfeit cashier's check in one instance cited by Los Angeles authorities. The alleged ringleader or the opei:ation, Theodore M. Southwood, 3?, or Santa ?o.1onica. also remains free. Investigators said the largesl single transaction charged to the 20 alleged swindlers was a Feb. 7 purchase of 1 l cars from a leasing company with a !ic· titious $46,200 cashier's check. Mesa Council Hears P~lans 011' Downtown Members or tbe Costa Mesa City Coun.. cil listened to a two-hour presentatiQn on downtown redevelopment Monday night but took no actio. on the plan. A"istant City ?.1anager Robert Duggan said various phases of the red evelopment question were examined by an expert in municipal bond marketing, Leon Norman 1 and a George Dickerson representa tive of a private develop.ment firm. "II u•as a real thorough presentation but it looks like \ve're talking al least three lo four yea rs before we can begin U'ith any kind of plan," he said. Costa Mesa is interested i n refurbishing the downtown district bound· ed by the future Newport Freeway. Orange Avenue, 17th Street and 19th Street. n is estimated that the plan Vi:ould cost $20 million and would take 20 years to complete. Among the fina nce plans under con- sideration are establishment of a special tax assessment district, or use of priva te capital or federal redevelopment fund grants. Duggan said the experts poioted out lhat the private financing method may be the best since some other cilies who have applied for federaJ redevelopment funds had lo "'ait as long as eight years before the gra nts \\'ere a\~:arded. Services Held For Student, 17 Requiem l\1ass was held th.is morning for Estancia High School student Ray. mond Roy, 17, who dJed of cancer SU!l-' lay. Young Roy attended Estancia durinr his freshman year, attended another school last year and was a home student this past school year. Rosary Monday evening and ?o.fass \\'ere held at SI. John the Baptist Catholic Church. Costa l\1esa. Interment is at Good Shepherd Cemetery. He is surv ived by parents, ri.tr. and 111rs. lfenry A. Roy, Jr., of 2828 Seran1 Place. C-Osta Mesa; sisters, Gail Babiuch, Sacramento: Sheryl Roy, Costa Mesa; grandparents i\lr. and l\frs. Henry A. Roy, Sr., Pennsylvania; and Mr. and i\1rs. Ralph Meggison of Connecticut. SERVICE •.. How Much Is It Worth? In th• carpel business sometimes its worth EVERYTHING! Hardly o d1y goes by that we don't gtl o ceU regard ing another companYs poor installation. Occasionally the damage resulting from poorly sewn seams or {·aped sea ms is not repairable. Then the velue of tho investment looks po le indeod! ' , Why pey $300.00 or $1 5p0.00 /or cerpeling and gamble with the instellation? • We maintain aH of our own crows, all taught tho ONLY woy to in- stall cerpeling-the RIGHT woy! Tho grutest mejority of our b"u1in1ss is rof1rr1I, Thero is • reason! ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 !"lac.ntla Ave. COSTA MliSA 646-4838 • I I U't T ........ CITES DANGERS Nixon Ad•iMr KJssJnger Soviet Summit Go-ahead Seen By Ki ssinger WASHlNGTON tAP) -Or. Henry A. M Wuu:e~ said today President Nixon nializtos his latest Vietnam moves "will ettal# short-term dilhrullit!I for Sovie t lodfn" but fully hopes lo proceed •lh A!oscow summit talks 1'1ay 2:!. Kass.mgt.r, thf Presidenrs assistant for a.;.IJcml security 1ffain, said the United es J'fl'tived no jndlc1tlon from MCO'N u to whether the Soviets ,will •1et to pt'occed with the summit. He said "'il •·Ill probably be a day or.so" before fMTial reaction i's received. Whilu sayillJ Nixon's attempt lo block receipt of Sovitt \\':Jr supplies to North Vlt tnamese port s presents hloscow with dif!kullies, Kiss inger said the Soviets ••ptrhlitttd a situation that posed 01as.- aivt difHcullies for us.·· TM presidential aide, y,•ho repeatedly rtital.ed an American willingness to resume public or private'peact talks, told • news conference the Ni1:on ad- ministration ''perhaps underestimated the mauive influx of offensive weapons. KiJ1U,,tt argued that the Sovi<t arms ahi-ts Upped the mllillry bllaD<t in Jndoehlna In favor of Hanoi's forces. Rdponding lo questions. Klsstna:er s1id the Nlxon moves involve "some risk." He added: •"flw judgmtn1 \\'as lhnt It did not in- volve M una('C('plt1ble risk .'' IJut. he cooceded that only evcnt1 will pro\'e whether the presidential str..atei;y •'i11 work. K.llinatr said he would not expect the mo,·a qainst Hanoi's shipping lanes to 1rrect U.e battlt .iit South Vietnam during the ntrt thrtt weeks. Howrver, be said tbett ,h.;:J.ld be a battleritld Jmpact t..)Clod that point. ~Jfn«tr said Nixon rtachtd his dtcis1ons ··•ilh enormous pain and 1re.1t ~tw:tance." Ito pkturrd his own t-May I mattb& in l'ans ~·ith Hanot·11 Le Dur TI» • lla<lng played an Important part in RtUnc Ult stage fo.r the moves · Nixon •iiOUilt«I Monday night. Sb morilh! had been 1pent arran1in& lht Paris conference. he rtporttd. But he s:i1d lhaf hi!I assuranct.s to Le lbc Tho that the United Si.tt1 ls willing IO f'lplort ··,,·ery conce ivable approach" I ard peare were met by a ttltaltment Of 1 ltando'lr~ Hanoi lint. Ht said :· .. l\'llat •·e beard rould hl,·e bttn ~tlpp·d from a newspaptr and 1e111 lo us 1tnu:n the mall." 20 fndieted Forgery Network Reported Broken A flouri shing forgery rlng lhat netted up to $1 .5 million by dealing in cars, coins :ind cash has allegedly been broken by in· dlctment or 20 Southlanders, including a Newport Beach man. Ptfarshall D. Hotflund. 32. of 1826 Port Charles Place, is amon g thost: named In tod ay's announcement by Los Angelts County District Attorney Joseph P. Busch. Hofflund is among 17 men !and three women still sought by authorilies in con- nection Yl'ith the operation that allegedly bilked businesses from San Francisco to the Mexican border. Crimes charged to the defendants named in a secret Grand Jury indictment include conspiracy in all cases, plus 17 counts of forgery, seven of forgery of the state seat and three co.unts or poSSf:SSion or checks with intent to defraud. The mass indictment accuses the prin- cipaJs of operating a novel scheme in \Vhich they bought new cnrs with forged bank checks, then forged driver's licenses used as identification to re-seU the1n. Investigators claim the ring may have worked as far back as September, 1970. swindling victims out of $500.000 in Los Angeles County alone. The indictment also claims they dealt !n gold coins, diamonds and other valuables quickly converted to ready ca sh. "This is 'or the most sophisticated FrJ...Pagel MURDERS ... Beach Jndependent Press-Telegram, was shot in the back while his wife was hit in the head and in the back, by an as yet unknown caliber of bullet, police said. The couple \Vere apparently shot from outside. police explained, and their bodies "'ere stretched across the open doorway \\·hen Steven found them. A neighbor. Peter Garland. deseribed the Schiavones as "good people". He said lhey have a son. John. in Burbank, and another son, Richard, who was wounded two weeks ago in Vietnam. Another neighbor. Joe Maher, added: ''There's a numb shock when You hear something like this. The w h o I e neighborhood is worried." Police investigators spent the day searching the house and yard for the weapon or weapons and any other signs of what happened. The boy. Ste,·en, attends Finley School In the Westminster school district. He telephoned police after discovering the bodi£>S of his parents. The Schiavone home is In a hou sing tract called "'Indian Village" in northwest Westminster, near the San Diego }o"reeway. From Pagel HEROIN ... nolice Yi'be.n notified or an incoming ship- ment. "We didn't ex~t it to go so soon," he re.marked . Investigators said Hernandez was armed \.\'ilh a revolvtt but made no at- ttmpt lo resist "·hen placed under arrest. .. \\'e used just about every type of sophisticated detection method during tttis case. including plain old-fashioned legwork," Sgt. Regan said in announcing ii. .. Our helicopter played an especially big role in sun·eillance." Value of the 39 ounces setted Monday night \\·ould be about $31 ,200 wholesale and up to $~.000 after it was cut with other compounds such as milk suga r for strttt sales. operations of its kind in Los1 Angeles - County." District Attorney Bu sl' II declared in announcing the case. A dozen perspns aged 51 to 71 had been taken into cust:pdy and arraigned In Los Angeles County Superior Court or releas· ed ptnding ju\'enile court action in the minors' case as of ~tonday. Jiiy Bern1an . the OA0s press secretar~·. sa id loday he has no idea ho1v soon Hoff- Jur.d might be arrested , adding that he is aware of the criminal action against him. Hoffl und and fen1ale co-defendant allegedly tried to pass a $12,000 coun- terCeit cashier's check in one instanc& cited by Los Angeles authorities. The alleged ringleader of the operation , Theodore M. Southwood, 32, of Santa ~foni ca, also remains free. In vestigators said the largest single transaction charged to the 20 alleged swindlers was a Feb. 1 purchase of I l cars from a leasing company with a tic· titious $46,200 cashier's check. Mesa Council Hears Plans On Downtown . M~mbers of the Costa Mesa City Qoun- c1l Jistened to a two-hour presentatian on downtown redevelopment Mooday night but took no actioa on the plan. AssLstant City Mana1er Robert Duggan said various phases ol the redevelopment question were examined by an expert in municipal bond marketing, Leon Norman . and a George Dicker.son representative of a private development firm. ··11 was a real thorough presentation but it looks like we're talking at least three to four years before we can beg in with any kind of plan." he said. Costa Mesa is interested i n refurbishing the downtown district boun<J.. ed by the future Newport Freeway, Orange Avenue, J7th Street and 19th Street. It is e'Stimated that the plan v.:ould cost $20 million and would take 20 years to complete. Among the finance plans under con- sideratiOft are establishment of a special tax assessment district, or use of private capital or federal redevelopment fund grants. Duggan said the experts poioted out that the private financing method may be the best since some other clties who have ap plied for federal redevelopment funds had lo wait as long as eight years before the grants "'·ere a\\o·arded. Services Held ' For Student, 17 Requiem ?.tass was held this morning for Estancia High School student Ray- mond Roy, 17, who clied of cancer Suo- Jay. Young Roy auended Estancia during his freshman year, attended another school last year and \\'BS a home student this past school year. Rosary Monday evening and Mass \\'ere held at St. John the BaptiJI Catholic Church. Costa ,._1esa. Interment js at Good Shepherd Cemetery . He is survived by parents, ~Ir. and ~1rs. Henry A. Roy, Jr., of 2828 Seran& Place, Costa f,iesa: sisters, Gail Babiuch, Sacramento: Sheryl ,Roy, Costa Mesa; grandprirenls J\lr. and ~trs. Henry A. Roy, Sr., Pennsylvania; and Mr. and r..1rs. Ralph 1'-teggison of Connecticut . SERVICE •.. How Much Is It Worth? In the corpol businoss sometimes its worth EVERYTHING! Hordly • doy CJOfl by that WO don 't gel 0 con regardin g onolhor comJMiny's poor instillation. • • Occasionally the damage resulting from poo rly sewn seams or t aped seams is not rep1ir1ble. Thon the vo.,• of the investment looks polo ind .. d! Why p•y $300.00 or $1500.00 for carpeti ng and gemblo with tho inst1n11ion7 • maintain 1D of our own crows, oft ta ught tho ONLY way to in- .tol the RIGHT way! Tho 91'Ntesf mojority of our liinintss is rof.,,.11. n.... is ."""'"' ALDEN'S CARPns • DRAPES 1663 Plocentitl Awe. COSTA MISA , 646 4838 J i I ; ' • I ' ' ' '