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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-05-22 - Orange Coast Pilotea an ea· VOL. ... MO. 10. I llCTIOMf, M PAelS In Toes: Ho . . es .Aired MONDAY AfTERNOON, MAY 22, [1972 • • • • •• •• • • • • • President ~Nixon ·· • Ill Moscow Lands Hand.,.tade Plane Dana Point Man • Killed Ill Crash A Dana Point man and his flying com- panioi1 were killed Sunday when their ex- perimental, hand-built biplane lost power and crashed into the desert west Of Vic- torville. San Bernardino County S h e r i r ! ' s deputies said Floyd Eugene Robinette, 36, cf 25222 Brigantine Drive, Dana Point, and James Herbert Richter, 46, of Pomona, were pronounced dead at tfle scene at the 9 a.m. crash at the west end of El Mirage Dry Lake. Mr. Robinette was employed as an engineer with TRW Syst~ms,. lnc., a~d was a qualified commerc1.:il pilot. He 1s survived by his ·wife, Reba, and two children. Funeral arrangements are pen· ding at Sheffer Mortuary in San Clemente. Sheriff's deputies said the two men had taken off in the open.cockpit aircraf_t ~nd were testing it to obtain Federal Av1at10~ Administration clearance to operate 1t h-om commercial air fields. Several hundred spectators watched Angola Airpla11e Crash, Kills 20 , LOBITO, Angola (UPI) -Twenty persons were killed when the pilot of an Angola Airlines twin-engine turbopr~p airliner overshot the runway at Lob1to airport in dense fog and crashed into the sea the airline announced . The F27 Friendship plane, carrying 19 passergers and four crewmen -all Portuguese -was on a scheduled morn~ ing flight Sunday from Luan'!3 t~ Sa .Da Bandeira in south Angola wtth its first litop in Lobito when the crash occ~ed, the Portuguese news agency ANI said. X-rated Movie Was Bad Sce11e ATIIENS, Ga. (UPI) -Watching ,n X·rated movie has cost two policemen six.month suspensions. Assistant Police Chier Clarence Schu11z told the A.theru Civil Serv· Jee Commission that he searched for officers David Hansen and Jimmy Means in the downtown area for O\!tt .30 miButes the night of May 3 without· finding them. Schultz said he then ""'' to the Paris Adult Thtatr~, a movie house raided in rK:fnt 'mODths ·ort ot>.scenity · charges. and found -lboi pair )caning •P.M the back, wall' waldlld .. x.rated mm. The olflctrttlld lhey-on!md tho tbt1ttr to make a ••roUUoe cbecL" the airplane lose: power at about 60 feet and plunge straight into the desert. The men were attending a flying meet of the Independent Protective Order o f Taildraggers when the crash occurred. The flying association is made up of owners ot the older type airplanes with a strut rather than a wheel as a tail Ian· ding gear. Reagan Rips Death Ban In County Gov. Ronald Reagan, speaking be£ore a Peace Officers Association meeti111.g in Anaheim this morning, criticized the state Supreme Court for banning the death penalty. While assailing the high court for outiawing the gas chamber as cruel and unlLSUal punishment, the Governor also urged the policemen from around the state to support current legislation, that would make ldlling an on-duty police of- ficer a first degree murder offense. He sald he had signed a petition demanding that the death penalty issue be submitted to the voters on the Novem· ber ballot. .. We are told that when society takes a life," the Governor said, "it is 'cruel and unusual' punishment. But to kill and maim and torture are cruel and unusual crimes and the victims of those crimes are not guilty of anything. Who weeps for them?" The 6 lo 1 State Supreme Court ruling Feb. 18 against the death penalty came "in total disregard or 200 years or legal precedent and in a reversal of its own decision on the same case four years ego," Reagan said. The bill making killing a Policemen a first degree murder ofrense is now before the Assembly after winning Senate ap. provat.' Reagan s a i d similar legislation failed to win approval In the 1971 leldslative session because or· ••a per· mlasive society." "We are told that crime is spa'Wned by poverty," the Governor sai d. "Yet, there was far less crime during the great deinssi-On of the 1930's when the unemP.loyment rate was five times higher than"1t Is today." Ragan.dlscount..i ficllonal violence on televiJion as having • harmrul effect on children. "Vet we are told that.hard-core -•phy baa no harmful <llOCt arid we *'"Id allow-our children to-be n· PQIOd to the mi>lt oalaclous material mnut merchants can manufacture:" He urged the llOli<e ofncers to write tbtlr. auamblymig ~ . t be ·~u. 11u1 d<lree mun1u 1i111 an<1 -..ita lmmedltt& _,.. • ' I Meet. at ·the Su1n111it U.S., Soviet Flags Flap; Bands Play MOSCOW (UPI) -President Ni>on ar- rived in Moscow today for the start of in· tensive .week·long. summit talks witb Soviet leaders on arms control, space, trade and possibly Vjetnam and the Mid· die East. American .and Soviet flags flapped under a gray sky and Moscow's wannest day of the year -81 degrees -as Nixon descended from his presidential jet, The Spirit o( '76, at Moscow's Vnukovo ll airport. He was greeted by band music and military honor guards that marked the first visit in peacetime by an American chief executive ·to-Russia. ··· Heading the welcoming party ot 300 were Soviet Presktent Nikolai V. Podgomy, Premier Alexei N. Ko,sygin and Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko. / The Communist Party s r~.~ e t a r "! general Leonid I. Brezhnev wa.s not at planeside. This was described simply as a matter of protocol. The President and his party rode by limousine through 17 miles of bunting• decorated streets to the Kremlin fortres1 in the heart of Moscow. Nixon said . before leaving Salzburg, Austria, where he made a 36--hour rest stop in a fairyland castle atmosphere, that he -expected· the summit talks-to ·be "the most intensive • • • I have ever participated in on substantive matters." PRESIDENT NIXON AND SOVIET PRESIDENT PODGORNY (LEFT) IN MOSCOW . Llah_t Moi:nept Shared After President's Arriv1I 1t Vnukovo.11 Airport But there were indications the talks might not produce the immediate accord on arms control that had been expected. The ride to the Kremlin from the airport look aboul 20 minutes. Wallace Showing Reflex Activity In Sole of Foot SILVER SPRING, Md . IUPIJ -Doc- tors. reported . tOday, that George "<:. Wallace's toes have shown in.Vtiluntary activity and an aide said that Wallace's son tickled bis father's feet "and his toes moved." The doctors said the development was 0 mos.t encouraging." But they said it was sW1 dlH\cult to asCertain whether Wallace will recover rrom the paralysis inflicted by a would·be assassin's bullets last Monday afternoon. "Over the past 18 houn there has been some return of involuntary muscular ac· tivity to the toes of both feet ," said a medlc1l bullelln from doctors ·at Holy , Cross Hospital. "Gov. Wallace exhibits nonnb.1 refleJ: rudloo when the aole of his foot is atlmulatld, '' bte buDeUn·said. "111ere ts also eocouraelng evidence ot Increasing smsations down to the level or lbe mkl-thlgh. The slgn1llcan<0 or 111«o finding u recardl to the final d!§.fet! o( recovery !tom lili pariilysis i1 dlUicull to \See WALLACE, P11e II Nortli Viet Amphibious Tanks Swarm Near Hue SAIGON (UPI) -North Vietnamese using P'176 amphibious t.anks swarmed across the My Chanb River. defense line 22 miles north of flue today in an ap- parent effort to establish a bridgehead. Heavy figbUng was reported in the area at 11ightfall. The North Vietnamese probing attack, the second in two days, wa!l believed halted by intense naval bombardment from U.S. 7th Fleet ships off the coast. by Allied air strike that cost an F4 Phan· tom jet, and by Allied 1rtillery. A South Vietnamese spokemsan in Saigon said tonight the North Vietnamese had been driven back across the river by nighUall, but reports·!rom the orea Itself were unclear. U.S •. adv)sers said they thought today's attacks were·a·•11l'Obe or reconnaissance in force" rather than an all.out' move against Hue. The North \lletnamese lru:Ieased their pressur~ 12 milts Wflll of Hue 11nd c11r· ried out sharp attac:ks near Kontum in • the ·~tral Highlands, at An Loe 60 ml I es north of Saigon, and in the Mekong Delta. South Vietnamese put C.Ommunist ' . . losses in those acti'ons at ·937 .men , in· eluding 23 tanks on the Hue defense perimeter. l~anoi Radio reported more intens:e U.S. air strikes against North Vietnam today and said U.S. Navy planes on Sun· .... day resumed mining of Haiphong Harbor. TheDC \\'IS no confirmation of the reports by the U.S. command but the Pentagon has made it clear ln public statemeots it is ·the U.S. Intent to keep Haiphong Harbor lnoperablec . The command did uy lt withdrew flOO American servicemen from Vietnam last week, but another 400 Marine fliers entered the war zone. The net withdrawal of 200 Americans was the smaJlest !lince lhe last weet of January, lfll. when. there were no pullouts.· It-loll U.S. troop strellilb in IS.. VIE'l'NAM llATrLE, P1ge I) Newsmen in the motorcade estimated the crowd along the route as 100,000 - (See NIXON, Page I) Weadaer 1ttore sunshine on the agenda for Tuesday with continued warm temperatures. Highs at the beachea 62 rising to 72 in-the inland areas. Lows 48-53. msmE TODAY The Costa Alua Civic Pln11· ho us t and the Htmtington. Beacl~ Pla11hoiue both opened their season-closing pN<iuctions over the weekend. Both are re· viewed toda11. See Enttrlai11· ment, Pages 18·19. L.M, ._,,. r MfYitt 1•1J •Mllfl• t4 ......... ...... 4 C•ll*°"l• J Ot'~ c-ty 1t CllttltlM ~ SYMt 1'9fWr lf c-W:• u ,..... 11°•• Cl'tt,...,, 1S SN Mert1i. 1 .. 1. Dellll Jiltllttt It T.wrt• t• l•ltwYI ,,.. I 'nlMttn t•lr .....,,._.,.. , .. ,, . ~ . ,111111\ct , .. " .... fl ""°"'.. -H WMIW'• ••• tMt'-t--AM Ln9tri ti 'Wlf'N ,._.. 1 4 I I 'J I ~ J! DAILY PILOT 5 Monday, Ml)' 21. 1~71 ~Major Soviet Goals Behind Summit Eagerness . ~ ' ,, By WIU.IAA! L RY AN ... 5"c'-1 e.i ......... .I Only two "'ee~ ago, the chnnces thiit •• the Kremlin would countenance a summit f meeting vdth Presidenl Nlion a.t tis time fttrt, in the view of many, worth Jess •:ih1 nn a plugged kopek. Now the summit Is : about to begin 011 schedule. Why ? Behind the apparent eagerntss of Ctn<'ral Secretary Leonid I. Brezhnev and hls colleagues in the Soviet Com- mu nlSt party leadership to meet this , week with the President :i.re a number or major Soviet policy goals. ll bad seemed on May I lhat Nlxon'a Cri11ai"4l Cases decision to mine North Vietnamese port.I to a.low Soviet· supplies would wash out the.summit. It didn't, Although lhe RU$8lans vow to continue supplying billions of ruble1 worth of hardware to J1anol, the Vietnam situation is getting In the way of aome major Soviet goals. The Kremlin eye has long been intently fixed on Ellrope. Its drive for a security conference goes back many years and recently has had the highest priority. Moscow wants Europe to agree to the idea or a ''renWlCiation of force" in the same pattern as tbe eWst German-Soviet . Split Decisions ., Upheld by Court WASlilNGTON CUP!) -The Supreme Court in a 5-4. vote held today that a state may perm it convictiona in criminal cases by Jess than a unanlmoua vole of the 12· man juries. : The decision came in cases from Louisiana and Oregon. U n a n I m o u s " .. verdicta: are required In federal courts ·and most other 1tates. Under Oregon's conatitutlon, 10 of 12 jurors may return a verdict of guilty ex- cept In murder cases. The Lou isiana practice under both law nnd thr' state constitution allows con- .,:; vlctlon by nine of 12 jurors , except when · lhe defendant could be sentenced to death . In additioo. Unanimity is required in less serious cases tried by five-man ju ries. Texas, Montana, Idaho and Oklahoma ' ·Skin Diver Dies ·After Rescue , Try in Newport ~. Drowning has been established as the . caus~ of death of a 200-pound Downey • skin diver pulled from the surf off Co r- ona del Mar shortly before midnight Saturday. Melvin G. Pardee, 28, was given mouth- • ~rT'(OIJth re!ucitation and then flown to Hoag Memorial Hospital by the Newport , ~ch ponce helicopter, 1"bere Ile was dead on arrival. i· Coroner's deputles said they at first · suspected n possible coronary attack due lo the 5 foot, 10--inch truck driver 's heavy build but an auto psy showed he drowned. ,; Investigators said Pardee's di ving com· 1 panions, David Litva and Greg Moger. also of Downey, were struggling to bring him ashore when they reached the .scene. A bystander, James A. h1art in, ol Ana· helm. began administering £irst aid while awaiting the helicopter and a fire de- J)81rlment team, police said. Srts pec t Se ized: 'Gnilty as Sin' Tinkering y,·ith n car radio can be troublesome. especially when Costa h1esa police catch you doing It about 11 :30 p.m. Sunday in a closed auto agency owned and operated by someone else. This is what landed a 28-year-old man In city jail on suspicion of vehicle tantpcring early today, according to Patrol Sgt. Sam Corde iro. lie warned the arrestee he had the r ight to remain silent and anything he said could be used against him in court, but the suspect reportedly poured out a tale of remorse any y,·ay. "I'm guilty as sin and I'm sorry 1 tried to do it and I'm sorry I got caug hl . but moslly I'm SOITY I tried to do ii." he alle).'(edly declared. OIAN61E COAST ST DAILY PILOT allow less than unanimous verdicts for minor offenses. ln another case today, the court upheld the conslltutlonallty of federal and state immunity Jaws U5ed to require a witness to give evidence or face jail for can· tempt. The statues are used as a major weapon in the war on organized crime. The 5-2 ruling came in test cases challenging the immunity provision of the 1970 federal crime control law and New Jersey's state statute aiong the same lines. They are used when a witness resorts to the Fifth AmendmenL claim that his testimony might incriminate him. The immunity decision dealt wit h two types of exemption from prosecution. One is known as "use" in1munily. This promises that a witness will not be pr05- ecuted for anything he says in his own testimony or any evidence of a crime deriving directly from it. . But it does not exempt him from pros- ecution if testimony by other witnesses or separate evidence links him to a crime. The other, much broader type is kno~-n lo lawyers as "trarusactlonal" immunity. This provides he can never be prosecuted for any crime involved in his testimony. The court upheld "use" immunity in today 's two decisions. Justice William O. Douglas, one of the fo,diasenten in the jury decision, said the iJecision amounted to "a paring down of civil rights ••• that touch mostly the lower CUI~ in our IOciety. J refer, of coone, to the blacks, the Chica.noa, the one-mule fanners, the a g r I c u I t u r a I workers, the off-beat students, the vie· tims of the ghetto." Justice Thurgood ~Iarshall a I s o dissented, declaring "today hte court cuts the heart out of two of the most im- portant and Inseparable safeguards the Bill of Rights. offers a criminal defen- dant : The rig hi to submit his case to a jury and the rig ht to proof beyond a reasonable doubt." Chief Justice Warren E. Burger and J ustice Harry A. Blackmun , Lewls F. Powell, William S. Rehnquist and Byron R. White voting to uphold the lower court ruling. \Vhlte. who wrote the majority opinion, said "requiring unan imity would ob- \'iously produce hung juries in some situations where nonunanimous juries will convict or acq uit. But In either case. the interest o[ lhe defendant in having the judgment of his peers interposed between himself and the officers of the state who prosecute and judge him is equally well served." Suspect in Rape Not Santa Anan A Santa Monica policeman accused of rape was erroneously identified as being a member of the Santa Ana police force in a Daily Pilot story last Thursday. The Daily Pilot regrets the implication that Jerry Lee Hurst, 24. had been f'mployed by an Orange County Ja w en- forcement agency. Following a n1istrial declaration in a Los Angeles Superior Court. a second lrlal fDl' the San ta Monica Policeman has bttn set for June 20. 1-iurst faces charges or kidnftp, rape and sex per\'cnilon in connt>etion with alleged attncks llf:ainst "·01nen in Redon- do &ach and CUiver City. truty just ratified ln BoM. The Russians cannot hope to expel A1nerican influence from Europe because Jt is so entrenched in so many ways, but they can hope to persuade Europeans that a U.S. military presence is becoming ever Jess Important : perhaps bot h the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and the \Varsaw Pact could be dismantled. The Russians can hope th at the Bonn- h10SC{IYi' treaty and the summit will n1,an 11teps toward an all-Europe security ar- range1nent accepting the status quo on the continent. That would Jes.sea the need for the awkward Brezhnev Doctrine whlc:h infillls on the ri&hl to intervene where\'er Communht ru1e is threattDed. The Soviet Union's weste rn buffers could be considered permanent and un- cho.lltngable. \\'hat else do the Russians want fro m the .summit? They · want expanded economic and trade ties with the West and the United States and access to Western technology for application to lhe Soviet consumer economy. The Soviet system is more than 50 years old oow and its domestic economy still suffers from comparison with lfater A Co1n111odity .. Western standards. The Politburo long hu been feeling 1he pressure of popular lmpatJeoce. The Soviet economy cruld make ~f­ recuve use cf some of the enormous 1n- ve9tment in superweapons and defense. Some sort cf agreement on limitation of ml!slles would be attractive to Bre7.hnev, aa Jt would to Nixon. 'I1lere has been some expeelation that s beginning, at least, emanating from the strategic ann limitation talks .may be ready to memorialize this summit. China figures largely in Scl\·~et reason- ing on the need for this summit, and not UPI Ttlt pl>Olt A man in a booth dispenses drinking water as the toll in the heat wave S\veeping across India for the past 16 days mounted this weekend to 300 dead. The searing winds of the Indian summer are kno\1•n as the :.Loo' with temperatures reportedly as high as 135 degrees. Ckric Cancels Nevada Judge Walk . on Water , Refuses License Cites Leg Wound .. To Bawdyhouse JACKSON. Miss. (UPI) -The Rev. W. L. Jenklrus, the self-styled Third Prophet or God, cal led off plans to walk on water at the Ross Barnett reservoir because o[ a leg wound he said he received the morning of his proposed feat. The black, nond,enominational minister told police Sunday he was hit in the leg by shots fired.from a passing car. Authorities said Jenkins was treated for a "flesh-wound " and was not believed seriously injured. The slightly-built minister announced Friday that he 'Yi'OUld walk on the waters Sunday afternoon. He broadcast his plans on a local radio program he emcees. Jenkins said a car pulled alongside his van-type bus. about 1 a.m. Sunday at a Jackson intersection and someone inside the car yelled "Jesus, Jesus.'' Murder Vic tim F oun,d in Tub OAKLAND (AP) -Firemen re- ;pond to a blaze at a '5(1,000 home in the Oakland Hilts found an epparent murder victi m sitting fully-clothed in an upslairs bathtub. Oakland homicide inspector Rob- ert Warren said the case was one of ''arson and homicide" but de- clined to discuss details, including the cause of death. The unidentified victim was de-. !ICribed as a man in his late 20s. . ' VIRGINIA CITY, Nev. (AP) -A District Court judge in this one-time silver mining community has refused to order licensing of a house of prostitution, saying to do so would' "demean the stature of the court." Judge Frank: Gregory declined to grant a request in a suit filed by Irene York, who contended the Storey County Com- missi<ln created a monopoly by licensing ()nly one house or prostitution -Joe Con- forte's well-kno)Vn and popular ~1ustang ranch. Gregory noted at the" end of a day-long hearing in the 96-year-old courthouse that the state legislature had given counties "the authority within their discretion to license this s om e w h a t disreputable business." He said Miss York , in effect, asked him to license a house of prostitution. He said he would not do so. Storey Dist. Atty. Virgil Bucchlaneri, in his closing arguments, told the court f\fiss Yor k's action repre!ented probably "the first time that someone has asked a court for sanction to operate a brothel." From Pagel WALLACE ... ascertain at this time but is most en- couraging." Elvin Stanton, assistant press secretary to the wounded A1abama governor, said Wallace's son, George Jr., 20, visited his father Sund ay night and burst into Wallace's staff room aft er the visit, shouting : "l tickled his foot and his toes moved. Then I held up sheet so he could see it." Stanton said the younger Wallace in- dicated the governor was pleased with the new development. Billy Joe Camp. Wallace's press secretary. issued a statement from Cornelia \Vallace, the go\'emor's y,·Jre. "I'm not surprised," she said of the new development. "I was most op timistic all along and I thank the people or this country for their prayers and I hope they will continue to pray for my husband." Camp said that despite the doctors' uncertainty about whether Wallace would recover from paralysis. "this is the beginning of movement we were all hop- ing for." Vice President and r.trs. Spiro T. Agnew visited Wallace at the hospital this morning. President Nixon visited him Friday, the day before leaving for Moscow. I L~ause AtoSCO\\' mh;ht want to on y ueo.; P•""" balance the Nl1on visit to ~'6· Soviet fear or China is real. Some In- spired leaks In Moscow t~ese_ days suggest that the Nixon mo\1es .1ri V1etn~m y,•ill force closer H<..-'tl Ch1nese-So~1et coo~ration. But there h:i~ been no sign that the basic Mosco\\·-J'ek1ng differences v.·ere being patched up. ml The Soviet Union still has a !lion troops on the Jong Chinese border. A quiet Europe ~ould permit Brezhne_v and his colleagues to pay closer attention to Asia and the contest with Ch.ina, wi~t too much sacrificC' to the Soviet domesllc economy. Fro111 Page 1 NIX ON ... far fewe r than crowds \vho noisily greeted such pasl visitors as Fidel Castro and Charles deGaulle . Closer to lhe heart c( h1oscow, the side\~'alk crowds \\'ere three or four persons deep. They appeared friendly but \1·ere silent. At the palace \\'here he is staying In bloscow, Nixon accepted a sinall glass of cognac along \l'ith other American leaders as their Russian hosts toasted Nixon's health. ' The Nixon arrival wa s seen live on both American and Soviet television. The Ameican television networks picked up lhe Russian TV pictures and interposed the ir own commentaries. Tass, the official Sov-iet news agency, also gave unusually fast treatment to the arrival. Tl!ss commented, "It is difficult to overestimate the significance of this \•isit." hfosco1v 1ele\'ision devo1cd 25 minutes to !he live arrival cereinonies . There \\'ere a rcw smiles but no tradi· tional bearhugs or greeting for Nirod from Kremlin leaders. Kosygin. hardly a smller at the best or limes, offered his band to Nixon. ?ltrs. Nixon took into bo!h arms a bouquet of red nowers. Diplomats noted the absence at the airport of Brezhnev, the leader jud~ed more equal than his equals on the 'iovit-L Union's la.man ruling Politburo. He had generally been expected to be present. About 200 lluss ian \\'Orkers. bused lo the airport, dutifully \vaved U.S. flags bi..t did not shout or smile . The Nixons y,·ere to be guests at a din- ner in the Grand Kremlin palace in the evening. The first talks between Nixon ;ir.d Brezhnev were planned at 1 a.m, PDT Tuesday. t.1rs. Nixon's Tuesday schedule ·:!lllN for a visi t to a seconda ry school, a r ?de on the 1'.foscow subway and a tea. Nixon came lo t.1oscow 84 days after lie ended the fir st trip to China by a U.S. President and 14 days following his order to blockade by mines North Vietnam's harbors. Despite the American-Soviet discord O\'er Vietnam and the Middle East, the successors of Ivan the Terrible. Peter the Great, V.I. Lenin and Josef Stalin took pains to put a happy face on ?11oscow. Red and _red-white-and-blue bunting decorated the route from the airport to the Kre1nlin. Women in babushka scarves scrubbed off the traffic signs, and residents of apartment houses along the limousine route had been ordered not to hang their \'.'ash from halconies. In addition to Tass. Pravda, the Com. munist Part y newspaper. characterized the talks as necessary for world peace. Pravda published a three.inch pi cture o{ Nixon on its front page -a rare splash for a foreigner. It was a 3-hour. J:rminute flight for Nixon from Salzburg, where here was seen off by an Alpine band and a friendl y crowd of at least 3.000. Nixon waded inlo the crowd shaking hands for two minu"\e.s before boarding his plane. The departure v.·ent off v.·ithout a hitch or an angry \\'ord. in contrast to his ar~ rival Saturday night when demonstrators shouting "Ni~on-murderer~'' forced an eight-minute delay in the President"s lan-ding. Tht Orenge C011t DAILY PILOT, with M idi It tomllll\fd tt>t NIWl·l"rtu. le Mll~cl 11y ll'o• Or~"'il• Co.11 hllol!Wllfll Qimsllny, ltP" r•1t f!01!ia..1 •rt p\11111111\tid,, ~•v lll<Wlrl'I Ftidty, llH' Co.11 M_, "'"""'' l t1dl, Hun1111111CNI 1!1Kl'l!FOl,llll1l11 \1111-!y, L1111nu llfftl\. lr..trlt1S1d!lltb•<Jl Mid Stn Cit!Twnlt / S.11 .I-(lfll1tr-. A ttna11 l'ftlw\tl ~llltn ~ putilithcd S.lunil.V. llnlll Slll"lll•Yt- Thtt (N'll'IC!otl PWSWl!nl """' b •I SJ) Wnl l •Y Slrfft. Call M ... C1Ul'Wllle, ,,.,._ F rom Pagel Beautiful Diamond Rings at Big Savings ..... J ., J • j , flo\i1rt N. W1M 'tn iOC'l'll •nd ""'Usntr J1dr It. Cvrl1y Viet 'mkl"'11 •nd ~t Mtntttt n,,.,,,, K11•il Eoltor Tllo""'' A. M11rpfii111 M1net1ll'l9 Efltof Ch1rln H. Looi Jtith1r4 P. Nin A»ii11n1 M11119trie iduon C .... MM: S» Wftl tar Sll'ftf N~_f1_~: JW H"'°"' 1i11i1tt_.. ~ lffdrl: m ,_, ... .......,. H.vlftf!.., ktdl: 1117J IMdl ....,....,.,. a. ~; m """" l'I Calftllll ll:MI T .. lf.1 11 C71 4) '41-4111 C......._. A4twl' 't 441•1671 ,,.. c..., ,,,.... ..... utllM ... di 4tl ..... tt p,_ Ntrll ~ '*""f C1a a.a .. .... u .. ~ 1m. 0r-.. a.• Nilltfl .. ~. ... -........ ~""""· ....,.. """"' .,. -~"-'-" ...... ""' .................... "" ........ ""'"""' ._., ---dMll ,...... ..... ttMe .... C..R,..._ Mrlu•n• .,. Uf'l1lr ....., """"""t ... """ Wt .......,, ""'""' .,_., .. RM.......,,, VIETNAM BA TILE ••• Vietnam at 64.800 as of Thursday. Prtsident N\1on ordert>d American Strt>ngth dropped to below '49,000 by June 30, An average of more than 2.600 U.S. troops must be pulled out tach week to mett that deadline. Sinct the. COml'?llnd issued it.s weekly stf'tllllh repon, another mo Marin< alnn,en have been add«! to 1he Vietnam rolls. military JOlftts said. One South Vietnam... vldory WIS reporled -In Binh Dinh Province ln the coastal hlihlands near Qui Nbon. Government tniops thore recaplured Combat llaH Salem Sunday without ma· jot oppooltloo. It WU tbe IOUthemmost Communill J>Ol(Uoo In that province l<h<rt they ... trol -ol tbe nortbml por11on. Dbpatcbes from Hue Aid 1he Com- munbu, 1llilll a llrt• number ol the So'llfloliulll PT7I lanD, croa the My a.oil-RI,.,. about a llllLmUt aaulb o1 the Van Trinh Br\dgt, three miles In fro m the seacoast. Allied source.s said there was heavy fighting. All of the area -as was Quang Tri to the north -is in ranae of U.S. 7th Fleet c!atrQyen and cruisers equipped with mls3Uts and ~-knd 3-lncb shtlls. A!Ued oUldals said it :ie<m<d possible the Communists _.. ltJ'lni to establish a bridgthrad across tbe river ill prepan· Uoo for the assault on Huo but that todA)''• strtkts W<tt not accompanied by the normal btavy artillery bancqts UIOd . In previous assaults. Tbcy &aid oo1y lour IA> slI rounds of 130MM artWery ltll In !hat area today. · Fltld ""°"' sald-O>mmunist artWery did sboot down an Amtrbn ~ Phantom jtt bllt that tht pilot and rodar man aboard pantdlilod Int<> South Vietnamese marine poollloos and Wttt picked up by • U.S. Air YOl'lll ""'!II_ er. LA Dll'S WIOOll•• AtiD ...... .aMl'MT .... MT 1/S ct. dllf'Ntllf • lfl wllltw fOlcl, UOll'S •IOOl"O &lfO a"GA••Ml'JllT 1tt11• tn C..,lt, dl9fnCll'ld 1~ li7 I t!'Nll till_. "'•1 1/J ct. s.i In w1111w eolf, '=' $225 $185 $165 ... ~•let' 5110 s75 DOM ucm 555 OUR MOST UNUSUAL s50 DIAMOND GUARANTEE LADIU $275 $ 3 .WIOOH .. AllD aJteAH.Mt"1' a1ff 1 5 ~ .. ~ 111 ct. -'II ' .,,.. ......... _, ""' A • When you buy I di• C"-from OYer 125 wedcll119 ritlCJ sets. Also lanJ• selection of mond from 111 we will solitaires. guorantH that dlamotid at 40% MOR E than you Id fw JI OI' your rnoMy Can you do as w.tl ••""""? COMl'ARE. • • DAILY l"ILOT 11111 l"Ml1 Sliglitly Disoriented Cub Pocahontas, one of Frasier's many cubs lrom Lion Country ~a!ari , seems to be aski ng, "Why are all those people out ther~ staring at me?" as he \Vas on hand Friday night to receive a Headliner Awa rd on behalf of daddy from the Orange County Press Club. Frasier, the aging lothario lion of many wives and man y cubs, won the "Com· munal Service" award. F acuity to Join Students In Staging :f:aguna, Play Both facultv and students or Laguna Beach High sChool voill taem up this week for the spring production of ''Up the Down Staircase." \Vednesday. Thursday and Friday at 8 p.m. in the high school auditor ium. The full-length play. based on the book Memorial Rites Set for Laguna At Heisler Point The annual Laguna Beach Mi!morial Day services will be held at 11 a.m. on Monday May 29 at the Memorial Shaft on Heisler Point in Laguna Beach. American Le~ion Post 222 wi th Veterans of Foreign 'Vars Post 5868 have joined in sponsoring the ser\'ices. American Legion Commander Witt Baltuth will be master of ceremonies. Invocation \Viii be given by Dr. Albert O. Hjerpe of the Community Presybterian Church of Laguna Beach . The memorial address will be offered bv Gordon Elliott. director of the v"eterans Administration Regional Office in Los Angeles . Prlor to the address. organizations honoring lhe v.·ar dead \Viii be called for\•iarded to place a flor?.I wreath at the base of the f\.lemorial Shaft. Prior ar· rangement should be made by calling 494- 1219 or 494-6420. The El Toro :O.larine Corps firing squad will fire a volley at the sounding of Taps. McGovern Asked About Harlotry REDMOND. Ore. {AP) -Sen George ~lcGovern, v»ho has had to field a lot of questions regarding his views on mari- juana legalization. which he opposes. l''as asked what he thinks about legalizing prostitution. He said he is against it. Both question and answer produced considerable laughter. "Even if 1 lhought it was a good idea ." he told some 700 supporters Sunday in this central Oregon town, "I wouldn't say 60." He quickly added. "I don 't think it is a good idea .11.nd I'm not for it." • by Bel Kaufman. examines the trial! and tribulations of a young and inexperienced teacher and her first year instructing classes in a downtow n New York City high school. Laguna Beach High School faculty members Mrs. Nancy Calloway, Mrs. ~tarion Long, Mrs. Regina Cain, Mrs. Jean Mitchell. ~1rs. Christine Reeske, ~1rs. Susan November, ~1iss Lynn Meade, Ray Haggard. Karol Kunysz. Charles Schiller, Bowen Dickson, Em an u e I Calarmaro and George Carey are featured . Students htichele Dav.•netee Polland, Jay Stinnel!, Paula Einstein. Joy ce Eagleton, Wendy Peacock, D 'A n n e Purcilly, Julie Cabang. Shawna Johnson, Hane Healy, Sally Miller, Dee Dee Challis, Wylola BlantOn, Tim Brooks, Tad Ridder, Pat Flahive. Jeff Belnap, Lary Pannel. Marc Curtis and Joe Sharit. The show is directed by drama in· structor Jerry McColloch, assisted by Marilyn Cabang. Robin Buck is stage manager. Tickets for the show. priced at $2 for adults and $1 for students, are available at the high school acti vities office and at the door the night of the performances. Budget Session Slated for Capo School Trustees A budget study session will take place at a special adjourned meeting the the ·Capistrano Unified School District Board of Trustees tonight. The meeting will take place at 7:30 p.m. at Serra School, Capistrano Beach. Board members were given a prelim· !nary look at a proposed $10 million budg· et with a 19-cent permissive tax increase at their meeting last Monday. Superintendent Truman Benedict has told the board that cuts will have to be made but has not yet developed a priority lisL . Also on the agenda are several per- sonnel matters including consideration of reappointing Charles Bash. vice prin· cipal of Marco Forster Juni()!" High; renaming a vice principal for Dana Hills High School lthe first choice accepted a contract in another city); appointment of a varsity baseball coach at Dana Hills. ' Program Ba~ked Facts or,i Narcotics 'Not Enough' Orange County Schools Superintendent Robert Peterson says teaching students only the facts about drugs 1s much like a mother warning her child not to stuff beans up his nose. "\\fl\en she leaves, then he ex- periments," Dr. Peterson suggtSted. Peterson was making the point lo Orange county Boar.A.at..F..ducatioo mem · bers last "'eek "'hat "facts alone" can lead to Jascinalion v»hich can also lead to expcr1mentalion in the drug culturt, He made his report a! part of a lengthy rebultal to the qualms exprts.~ by two county school trustees aboUt tbe county· sponsored druf 8buse education program. Trustees stll have not decided whether to continue tht program available to 1111 county schools for another year. The boml seems to be spilt Mo 2 with Roi!tt AndersOn or Huntington Beach and Or. Dale RAlllM>n lrom Santa ADI criUcaJ of the p<!ll[IJll. The American ~fedical Association, Peterson reported. contends that "unless something is done about atliludes toward drug use" a decline in ii won't take place. In the county program, teachers have 10 three-hour \\'Orkshops where they learn about drugs and about hoW to instill aelf. confidence and defenses against peer pressure in students. Jn high school cla!ses. Peterson said, facts about drugs "are oft.en rejected in· tellectually. '' Like malaria must be prevented by 11swattln' mosquitos, a quite foreign act In fighting disease," Pe tenon &aid, .. some parents aeem to not believe tllk· ing about rlsk-beh""1cr ddtlltl the 1pre.ad of drug abuse. "But it appears tffectJve,11 he con- dude<L Trust .. , did not ifucuss l\ls report, whleh he uid would be contfnutd at a fulurt me<ling. Detective- ,< Asks$4,000 Back Salary By JOHN VALTERZA 01 111• ~llr 1"11111 Stiff A police detective who left the city of San Clemente earlier thi! year for a post In Colorado has filed a claim for more than 600 hours in unpaid overtime he claims to have accumulated over the pas( four years. But Burdell Burch could care less about the money. Instead, he plans a major battle for the department he left behind, he told the DAILY PILOT late Friday. In a registered Jetter received in city hall, Burch dema nds payment for about $4,000 in straight-pay compensation for the overtime assertedly amassed during his service in the force. Burch, a long-ti me resident of San Clemente, was a narcotics detective whe n he rf.!igned lo assume a police agent's post in Lakewood. Colo. a Denver !luburb. "I'm not doing this for myself," he asserted, "but for the members of the department in San Clemente who have had to work thousands of hours without pay or compensatory time off." Burch's claim -the first ever such de- mand for overtime -will come before the City Council at its meeting June 7, but City Clerk Max Berg said that he still · MICHAEL R. DUNHAM San Clemente High Saddlehaek Valley Mond1r, Mq 22, 1972 ROBERT S. DAVIS University High School Bond Measure Pushed by Stnte Aide does not know whether City Attorney F. Don , ,Anderson, executive secretary· distri cts. h-1acKenzie Brown will advise councilmen director of the State Allocations board, ''The other $100 million is more signifi· lo conside r the large claim in private. was in the Saddleback Valley late last cant to thi s school dis trict." he added. Secret sessions are authorized by law week plugging passage of Proposition lie explained that San Joaquin has been on matters of hiring and firing and ma t· Two, the state school bond measure. handicapped in the past in not having lers of pending litigation. Anderson addressed seve ral groups in· state funds readily available for planning Whether I.he simple claim by the officer eluding trustees of the San Joaquin and construction. Some planning funds is, indeed, pending litigation . remains to Elementary School District. have been advanced by developers, but be determined. "There are two components to the prop. thrse must be repaid. Burch said that he is not interested in a osition." Anderson noted . "There is $250 Proposition Twu \Viii rovide thi s much· simple, partia l settlement in itself. miOion for earthquake rehabilitation, pro-needed money .------- "The only way I would settle this ·-Viding loans to districts who with need. "The measure has been wcll ·received . thing," he said, "would be if the city These loans w~\I be fully repaid by the but v9ters are concerned about the cost agreed on a smaller settlement plus the borrowers, not ta xpayers in other of government. Be sure your voters know promise that the officers in San Clemente the facts and how they relate to the local would receive compensation for all the debt se rv ice. As loni;: as the distri ct re- hours they work!' S S J l mains on the state program , debt repay- He added that he has contacted a local Um mer C 100 ment does not go beyond the 4().cent attorney who would be willing to handle a limit. court battle "if it became necessary." SeSS;OltS Slated "Once the $100 million is available. we Burch left the department last winter . " hope we can remove the 'priority system' for a job offering. much higher pay and and look at all applications for funds fClr benefits in Colorado. Summer sct)ool at San Clemente High construction, planning and site ac- Similar resigna tions ha ve plagued the School will begin June 26. quisltion on the ir own merits." force in recent years , and this past week Any student interested in registering Anderson cautioned the ho a rd , alone two top officers have resigned, should see his counselor as soon as possi-however, lo be su re any sites they .stating their reasons as the need for ble. Openings are still available in many purchase are necessary. He reviewed the better pay. classes. state's recent crackdown on school One of them was David Munro, San Out-of-district students ma y enroll in dist ricts who hav e pufchased sites that Clemente's Police Officer of the Year, classes if thty do not displace Capistrano have not been used. who has resigned to take a police post in Unified S;chool District students. He reiterated that a fa.st-growing Laguna Bach. Students will be expected to provide district like San Joaquin wlU ,reatly The issue of overtime has erupted intr> their own transportation . benefit from Proposition Two. prolonged battling in the past. A wide range of courses are being of· "If it fails, you have one alternatlve, The most widely followed case involved fered this summer. For more information but an expensive one to your taxpayers," s DAIL~ PILOT JANE RETHLEFSEN Laguna Beech High Three Seniors Receive Loan League Awards Three high school 1eniors have been named recipients of the annua.1 Lquna Federal Savlngs-Cali(ornla Savin11 and Loan League out.standing student award!. The sludents, from Laguna, ·San Clemente and Irvine . each will receive a $100 check presen ted at their schools' June a11•11rds assemblies. Jane Rethlefsen, a st raight "A" 1tu- dent. Is the daughter or Ann Rethlefaen , C Portola Road, South Laguna, 11 • Laguna Beach High School valedlct.orlan. She plans' to attend UC San Diego and study language. Miss Relhlcfsen IJ se~or class treasurer, a member of American field Service, modern d a n c e • In· ternationa l club, Soropttrnist "S'' Club, and yearbook staff. Michael R. Dunham is the son of Mr. and ~1rs. Robert W, Dunham , at 2721 Via Arholctla, San Clemente . He plans to ma• jor in mathematics at Redlands Univers1· ty and has participated in San Clement• High School athletics, student govern· ment and class activities. He has a grade average of 3.75 (with a 4.0 ave.rage being straight "A"J . Robert S. Davis of University High School is the IOll of Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Da vis, 11992 Antioch, Irvine. He plans ID altend Stanford Unlverslty and •lwfl bualliess raw. "This Is Laguna Federal '• 15th year of portlclpalion in the OUtatandlng Student Award Program" aald Lorna Mills, presl· the 1969 suit by ousted Lifegua rd Lt. call the school at 492-4165. he said. Steve Chorak for $1.600 in overtime ,;:;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;;;::;;;;=:=:::;;::;;::;;;;::;;;;::;;;;::;;;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;========================i wages he claimed he amassed during t\is dent. six years' pennanent ~ervice: on the department. The guard . who claimed his leadership in a bitter v.·age dispute assertedly Jed to his firing, subsequently settled out of court for about $700, But Burch's claim is the first of its kind. Chorak took his complaint directly into the courts. Burch has gone first to the City Coun- cil. Overtime is a key question this spring in city hall, because it forms a major part of the pay and benefit requests by public safety personnel who claim that on the average, office rs work perhaps 10,000 hours a year without compensation. Any compensatory time off for an y reason, by poli cy, must be cleared through City Manager Ken Carr. As a Jong shot, Burch admitted, he hopes to set a legal precedent in his cur- rent claim so that other members of the force could be repaid for their past overtime . Councilmen Plan l 1iaugural Dance The first inaugural ball for city coun· cilmen of San Juen Capistrano will take place Friday, Dinner 1''ill begin at 7 p.m. with dancing to follow at the El Adobe Restaurant in San Juan C3pistrano. Virginia John is in charge of ticket sales. Some invitations have been mailed but tickets will be available at the door if reservations are obtait(ed. ''The dinner-dance is open to anyone ~wan~ to come ," said Chamber Manager Maggie Olson. "We are honor· ing our City Council and staff and there will be many 'surprises' during the even.. ing," For ticket information call Mrs. John at 493-498'. Student Artwork Goes on Display Outstanding student work from the Laguna Btach School of art will be presented at the 5Chool's Annual Student Art Exhibit running Saturday, June S throu gh FMday June t at 630 Laguna canyon Road , Laguna Beach. The exhi bit will be open to the publlc from I lo 4 p.m. durlna: the. seven-day period. An invitational champagne prevltw will be htld June I by the Boord of Dire<tors for the Advloory Board. faculty. city of- ficials. board members of the fostival of AN and the 1.a,,... Btadl Art Auocla-uoa. r-'"•' i I \\e fit these Stride Rites as if our own kids were going to wear them. Stride Riles are built to fit. And our professional fitters are tra ined lo make doubly sure they do. $10.50 S!ride Rite. The most trusted name 1n ch il dren 's shoes. TRIDERITE0 J'l l't ' a Jt Ill fll.50!o$1l • WI CAAIY I 10 tt£ 54 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT CENTER • 644-4223 ... ,.., M•m C-.. e ......... ~ e M1 ..... C..,. ' • f • -t OAIL(PILOf F'am ecl Pieta Statu e Hit By Madman ... Ry CHARLES \\', HELL VATI CA.'1CITY1LPl 1 -Shl')UlLn~ "f am Je sus .hrist.'' a heardtd. lon~·ha1red man lC'apt·rl a barrll'f in front of ~1 i<'helangrlc>s Piela and befnrc the hrir- rifled ('Yt'S of :'iunday toUrJ 'iitS fC'p<!RIPd Jy Bmashed the priceless ma sterpiece vnth a hammer. The stunnini:? vand<ihsm was a crime wilhoul precedent al the Vaucan and wtth few precedents anyv.•here 1n the modern world. The m:irblr !-ilatue at St. Peter's B.as1l1ca of the ~ladnnna rr:idhn~ the rrucif1ed Jcsu.~ is one of the "orld's m n~t famous anrl lrra.~ured wnrks ot art. ~lo~! of !hr h!rnrs !OLlnd th1·ir rn11rk. S11«rl'ss 1ve s1\ 1n,t:s ko11rkrr! off the 1'.l ndonna 's nnse, sma~hr•I h1·r Jrft eye, c!ippl'd the left sirlc or hrr marble veil and fin.ill y knorkcri off her ll'ft arm just nh'lVP the rlhow V:it1ran offlri:il s r;il!rri the dama~e snriou~. hut s:11ri !hry hoped to re store th P1Pt:1 qulf·kly. The conredcd Jt would never lnok the sa111e again Th e only si milar t·a ~·· lnc;ide St Peter's in modern limes occurred 1n 1969 "'hen a Gemian tour1sl. saying he wanted to pro- test against nuclear arms. smashed the marble fingers on the left hand of a sliltue of Pope Pius VI beneath the "b~'>ilica's main altar. 'Not evrn Pope Paul VI was told about the Piel.a until after he :ippca rcd at noon .at his windew overlf}()k1n~ SL Pcter"s Squarr lo bless tourist~ and pilgrims. \Vhen he heard the nc"'s, he traveled down into the h.1•1lic.i in a pr ivate ('lcva tor "'ilh a gold i;atin throne to sec thr. d;image inflicted on the onl y piece of 11rt ever signed by the gen i us Mlchclangelo Buonarrot!. It was there he henrd the name of the rusty-haired . ru stv-hearded man with the hammer -LazslO Toth . JJ, a Hungarian· born citizen of Australla "'ho descrlbedc- himself as a geologist. The Piela i.~ a mri jeslic th in$?. a s\ij!hlly largrr-than-ltfe sculp!urc weighin~ 6,700 pounds nnd port rayin~ the 1'1adon·na cradling the body of Jesus alter the crui:if1x1un. It occupied a place of honor in the world's biggest Christian church . in the first chapel to the right as visitors en- tered through the ~re.it main bronze doors. Not even a Pope "·ould usurp its plact>. Only once since 1'1ichclangclo signed and completed it in 1499 hlld the Picta left St. Peter's -for 19 months in the mid·l!)6()s while it was on exhibit at the New York World 's Fair. UPI Tt!tp~Olo MICHELANGELO'S PIETA IN ST. PETER'S BASILICA WAS ATTACKED SUNDAY BY AN AUSTRALIAN Shout ing 'I. Arri· Jtsus Christ' Suspect Took Sledgehamm er Ta Madonna Figure at Church Ai1ti,var Slog ans At P entag on- But No 'ijlockade \VASHINGTON (AP! -A group of an· tiwa r protesters demonstrated al the Pentagon today but did not blockade the giant DefC"nse Department headquarters as they bad threatened lo do. Federal workers and u n i form e d military officers arrived at work unimpeded while the demonstrators sat on the sidewalk across the street from the Mall entrance. hoping to be joined by others from Washington just across the Potomac River. Shortly berore 9 a.m., ho"·ever. urged on by a young man who complained that demon~trators would get no attention from ne"·s media if they Just sat there, a group of about JOO formed a large circle 1n the street and began chanting antil'+'ar slogans. The circle gradually spread across the street and police then descended from the steps in a single line and advanced. Secret Service 'P.ages' Nixon Threat Suspect RED~10KD, Ore. (UPI) -\Vhcn the Secrel Service wanted to arrest a man for allegedly threatening the Hfe of Presi- dent Nixon Sunday, lhey had him paged over a public address system set up for campaigning Sen . George McGovern. Albert J. Meglitsch, 80, l'"ho was taken into custody, was in a crowd of 400 waiting for McGovern to arrive for a speech. The Secret Service hand ed a note I N SJ/ORT ••. In the master of ceremonies directing i\1f'glitsch to go to the airport gale \\'here he was arrestC"d. lle \1·as taken lo Deschutes County jail where he "'as held \Vithout bail pending an appearance today in federal court in Portland, Ore. e Prescott 'Barile' Over in mid-Atlantic Thursd ay to await four army bomb disposal experts who were parachuted to the ship. e A ri T/1efl J':!Je d \VORCESTER, 111"ass. (Aft) -Three men and a \\,'Oman ha ve been arrested in connection \vittr a $1 million art theft at the \Vqrc-cster Art Museum, but police say they have not reco ve red the four stolC'n "paintings. r..teanwhile, police reported Sunday that seven paintings valued at $42,000 were stolen from Deerfield Academy, at Deerfield, l<.1ass. There was no indication that the two incidents 1vere related. Deerfield police said th£" paintings were by Frency impressionist Camille Pissarro and 18th century American portrait painter John Singleton Copley. Police said the small pa intings, each about a foot "'ide, were taken !ale last 'o'-'C'Ck from the Frank L. BQyden Library. • Trio Involved? IRA's Call 'Lures' 60 To Bombing BELFAST (UPI ) -Dozens of persons v.•ere injured today in 11'+'0 separate in· cidents of bombs exploding in parked cars. A British army spokesman said the first blast , which injured nearly 60 persons, "'as the \\Ork of !he Iris h Republican Army tlRA t. An arn1y spokesman said a tf>O.pound bomb blast in an industrial area of No rth Belfast sent at least 49 people to the hospital surfering from cuts. bruises and shock. Witnesses at the scene said many V.'ere seriously hurt. The bomb exploded in the car at the Jennymount Industrial Estate parking lot. The spokesman accu sed the IRA of misleading security officials on the .loca· lion and timing of the bomb 1n a telephoned 'varning. He said the caller "'arned the bomb '~oulct of off in JO min- utes but th e blast came 10 minutes after the call as the area swarmed with flee ing people and troops trying to evacuate them. '·This seems a delibe rate IRA attempt to cause the maximum casualties in a Protestant area," !he army spokesman said. The residential zone around the in- dustrial complex is mostly Protestant. The second blast came in a pa rked car in 1\laghera. County Londonderry. 40 miles north\\'est of Belfast. The explosion slightly injured l\\'O cil·ilians and a British soldier. It "'recked the front of the local branch of the Ulste r Bank and damaged 15 shops, the army said. A spokes man said troops recogn ized !he car as on e used 1n the hold-up of a nearby village post oHice earlier. became suspicious and clea red the area before the bomb went off. The army said the IRA caller in lhe Bel.fast bombing further tried to deceive security men by 1\·arning the explosive was planted inside a furn iture factory in the industiral complex. "\Ve naturally concent rated on C"learing !he factory." the nrmy spokesman said. •·sui 11·e mored the evacuees 1hrough the car park. Thank Goel most "·ere out of the park bC'fore the explosion or the casualties \1·ould ha1•e been murderou s." The blast wrecked 10 ca.rs and trucks in the parking lot. shattered the furn iture factory next to it and smashed hundreds of windows, he said. \Vhen il went to New York. the Piela was transported in n bu 11 et pro o f , un sinkable steel crate wei ghing six tons and was insured for $10 million . lt was a symbolic figure because, art experts said the Pieta \V.'IS priceless. \Vhe n it returned in 1965, Pope Paul £a id 1t "'ou ld never leave aga in. The i latue anrl all other art treasures In th£" V.itir.in \~1ere insured in 1968, but the Vat ican never announced the evalua- t1nn of various n1asterp1eces there. The demonstrators fell back lo the sidewalk and remained there, confronting the row of poll ce. • In this initial encounter there ap-- parently was no violence and a demonstrator \\'BS heard congratulsting the group because "You got the word across and nobody got hurt." Arross the Potomac River from the Pentagon. an estimated 400 protestors ''olerl to n1:ireh across Memorial Bridge anrl protest at the mihtary complex. PRESCOTT, Ariz. (AP) -The "Bat· lie" fire is now a name in a record hook and a giant black 'scar on the side of the Bradsha\v Mountain sou!h east of here. Fire crews began mopup operations of tl";e 28.4,00 acre blaze Sunday, one "'eek after the fire broke out on Bar tle flats. -· Residents of the summer communities of Breezy Pines and \Valker were allowed to return to their cabins Sunday night. Tep cabins,_inc,!ud ing seven in the Breezy Pines area, were destroyed in the blaze. Officials_~id roadblocks to the Pine ~lats area remained up longer to allow fire crel'+'S to complete extinguishing the blaze. Wallace Suspect Linked With Mystery Meeting. ··u was fanta stic how it haiJpeoed ." s.11d Francesco Tlrinese. \vho \vas stan- ding 1v1!h a ~roup of Dutch tourists in fr ont of the statue. '"It w;is so quick." hr said ''Sudrlroly th.it r11an \\'as on the statue . just hitting a1\;iy with a han1mrr."' Dr. Seymour fisher. Lns Angeles. said hr rnun ted 11bout six hammer hlO~\·s. most of them aimed at !he f<i CC' or the i\l.1rlnnna . Ahout six rnen lt·:ipcd !n pull Toth d111\ n anrl :;;nn1r v.•1lnrss<"s ... ,nrl sun1r of !hr mr n and \1·nn1cn \\"ho sa111 th(' a!tack 11 :1r:1 rrl In hnrh lntn . '"E1cr.1on~' W<1!". slu11n1'd." said Fisher. ''Thrn 1 heard so111C"o11c crying. No ~CrPa1ns or ~hou!1ni; or any!h1ng hke t!i;1! ,Ju:.! nnr prr ... n1t C'r)'lll~ ·· \ 1l1t·1n r:11:1rds .ind tourists pulled and \1 r1·•.!l!'rl T1•th al.\av <ind pl1ced h1n1 in a rnal-.1•sh1ft eel!. The Vatican closed its 11111 pr1 .. on 1n J9i1. \1 orC' th,1n f'lf'.hl hours latrr. V11t ican :111 rhnrir1es h.inrllrrl Toth over ro 1t.1lian .. uii 1:1ls. 1vhn s111d he f11c-rd sr1·rr;il • h.1r .. , ... pro\'1dcd ma1;islratts drc1rie he l.~ I• r•1lh· ~.111r I ·11i1·r ;1 t'l!:"! t1>.!rcrn1cnt. lt.1l1ri11 court ~ Ir\ l•l'r .1111~ c !i.1r::1·d 111\h f.'l111m1tl ln,1? <"1"11111., in th•· \';111r;in, rrol"idrd thf' \".111r,1n rr1p1r't• !hi~. It did in Toth "s ('.I l :\~ 11111.111 pl1rr lnok him into custody, Toth r firi11!rrl "I 1!10 11 hrr;ni~c Jt.>~us' mother does nr\! 1 '\1~1 l an1 Jesus. t am ~ 11r hr\.U1iil'lo." They \\ere met at the edge of a federal pa rk by 15 mounted National Park policemen. Through a pohce loudspeaker, the d_emonstralors \1·rre told a parade permit would not pern11l them to match to the Pen!a_gon un til 7 am. PDT. At that point the protesters sat down and be ga n to sing. 1\bout 7:45 a.m. POT the main body of demon slrators reached the Pentago n and i:athrred in the street in front of the mall entrance. 1\hnost 1mmcd1ately police charged in· lo 1 hf' t:roup pushing them back to the nudd!C" of the street ThP polic-c thf'n fonncd a line down the n11ddle or the street all owing the rlf'n1ons1r.11ors t11 move no further toward the rn!r.1nce \vhere two more rows of gu.:irds stood ready. DAILY PILOT DELIV ERY SERVIC E Oc livtry of the 0.J!ly Pilot i~ guar.Jnteed M~n<UY F tod•v: I! you do nor ll•v• yat;r f'.•P~• lly ~ .'1<1 r>..,. tfll I nd vour (Ot'y will b9 ll•Ot10l'I 10 Y~U. Calla f t l !alltn 11nlil 7 ,)(! p"' S&lu•U~Y &NI Su""'Y' II vou do "°' recelvt VC'Ur CJPY llY f ft m. S1•uru1y, Of • Im. Sund•Y. c.ill and ft cony W•'I ti!! ~ra~h! tu YQ~. C1lll ••t 11kr.~ un!lr IQ a.m. Teleritiones Motl O••"~e (nuoty Arrat •.••.••. •n-UJl Nort~W••I 1"1unton11•on 81ad1 an.:! \l\e<'m<rl\!~• ....... , S•0-1110 Sin Clem~nlt, Cai:<1ilrano 811{~, San Juftn C~n•1tr•1"10, O&nf llo!n!, 5outll L•Qun•. te11un1 Nlguel •. 4n.u10 e Prisoner Rou~1p !\'EW ORLEANS (UPI) -Fourteen prisoners cut a hole in the ceiling of their cell. crawled to the roof of the four-story Orleans Parish Prison and lowered tr.emselves to freed om Sunday, usi ng a rope made of mattress covers. By early toda y, six had been recap. tured and eight \ve re still at large. The 14 jailbreakers were in a ''dorm itory cell"' a1vaiting trial on various charges, mostly narcotics v1o!a- lions. Two .of thC"m broke into a young \\'Oman s apartment and h£"ld her an d her t11'0 children hos tage until police ca111c to her rescue 12 hours later. Police s;iid after the entire group of prisoners broke out of jail al 3 a.m. Sun· da y. 11'+'0 of the m, David Hayes, 30, and Gerald Allen, 22, broke -into the apart· ment of Yolanda Temple, 24, and threatened to kill her and the children. e Queen Sail< Again SOUTHA~1PTO\'. England ! AP) -The liner QueC"n Elizabeth 2 sails again for Ne1v York today after an eastbound transatlan lic crO!';sJng dC"laycd se\'en hours by a bomb scar£". Announcing that its 65.000.!on flai;:ship was sticking to its sch('dule. the Cun;ird Steamship Co. refu sed to say \\•hat extra precautions '\'ere b£'1ng !ak.('n 10 guard the ship. The QE2 docked Sundav at Southampton, its home port after h<ilting Warmer Weather Remains ill o.~LI y Fair· Slio1 ce rs . ' • in Pn cific Nort1itces t, Plains C 111i for11in W4"''· "'~~v 'l•I•~··" •••ur"'"' lo \•.1•11.in C•I ,.,...,,,, I"" 1 -f•<I .:1~u ft! un•·~·~·•olv (nl<1 ltl't\Dt•tlU•t i, "" 1 '-'"''<••1 •" 1•r E•(tfll It"• ·~ ,,.19 "'0•111.., tlOUCt• •t...,. •~ (n•"· v ~· "''H II" (l•or '~""-'On T11tM11v, w11n t'"'"''•'u"' ,,,1,.. lfl!O l~ fl!'\, IM f'01 !>llll II.ti• INt $-kt M )'t -' Cd(! lrMI lln!\lf~' \INt •Ill! ,,.,.,.... l"O mou11ttln ••••• awr 1t'lf ..,.~••!If! • ..., l••t•• ('I fl•fl 10 n~I!• D•ttt•<t $.l!ll•n•tfl (~lilnrn11. '"'"""''~'~••• l'lev· "'"" •fl lt\f '°" 111 ,..., lt.,.,1anl)1 lcoelt'I • n.9~ 111 lfl 1"9el•• W11 0, et(l1"a !B ~l<ll ,J II)' l~ldll If'"' Dtr11ur•• ,...., c11mv l'!fO ll'lt mlo·tol •n CWllll •tld 111 .. ,,,,...,11i. ,.._,~, -_,,,., llu•-.. I' V.S. Su1nm 11ry n. -"""' ... ~ _, ""-' "' ..... "'"Of\ l't1MllllM •'•"-v tdll1 v. 91"11 """'-"""" '"°"" ~·· '" _, -· 'Wt1ll fM t.lt.... " . l\ll'llf .. I "'"""" Ille 1"1l11• a • I lQOO 191' ·~' ,r.f~i. lo--J\-l fi1• 1 :,, ,._.,VI ,., .. •tJtt fotOCASI. l" •~• P1 tol•c Norl~Wlill. m~i1 01 1~1 "111011 l1v u.-.O.r !tit Ill cloudy 1~111, lt"'l>t•&lu•e> toa•v t i t ••D1Ct~ 1-o tf&(~ 1111 IOI Of tOt l•om Ill• s.,..1h • WH! lnlo ,,.. Mld\11111. Mort mot!••••~ !f ... Hr1rurfl t •t l ltl!ICl"!I In "1• re\! or rn, cwMrv Et•ly m(lr11on11 t1rn11tt1lu1f1 ••"'II• fre>m 11 ""'fll 1t (vln•tofl, WYO, IO 711 ~pgfff\ ,, 0111•1. ,, •. Coastal Weathe r Sun'ly toe1.tv Ll1111r '<'•tit bit wl'"'' ~lqM ~nd "'llf""i°" llOUfl Mcon'llPIQ -•1er1v I l"O 11 ~noH '" 1n•rnoon1 IO!llY tl'ICI 'r~l"f. Hl91! IOCllV 1'11, CN1111 ,..,,,..,,,..,,... r1n0t 1roni so to 11. tnl111d 1 .... per11\1~1 r•ll!tf ftOm .. l-0 1'-Wllff ttl'llllfl"llure '' Sun, JtJ0011, Tides MOHOAY '"pm. JD TUaSOAY """ 11101'1 , .u . "' 3 • 1'1•11 '"""' , '°',.. ,, Stt:Ol'lll 111911 ' n ri !'\. s J Sk'Ol'ICll 'p:, 11 •Jom 1 • Sllfl RIMI J 4t t "'· $tit J ~ti"'· Morn ••'fl J'l' ~ l"'I ltll 1 'ft t 'Tl. ~·I ILWAUKEE fAP) -A r.-tilwaukee ferry manager says Arthur H. Bremer appeared as a swarthy, "'ell-dres.c;ed companion to arrange the first of three mysterious tr ips Bremer made across Lake Michigan in the weeks preceding the \rounding of Gov. George C. \\'allace_ Bremer, 21. is charged with shooting \\lallace on May 15. f<.1ounting evidence indicates he folln \\'ed !he Alabama governor for more tha n two months. Records of the Chesapeake & Oh io Tl<iilroad in Tl-1ihl'aukee show that Bremer took the C&O ferry from !11llwr1ukee to Ludington, l'vlich .. on April 9 and J\1ay 9. J~ecords in Ludington show he made the 97-milc trip in the opposite direction on April 28. The C&O fcrry·trainmastC"r, Enrl S. Nunnery, !old The Associated Press he recall s that BrC"n1er and a man "·ho ap- peared to be of GreC"k descent made ar· rangements for the ferry trips. A third person was traveling with the men but did not enter the ferry officf', l\"unnery said. This "'as th e fir st re port that Breme r had had companions in the weeks preceding the shooting. Acquaintances have described him as a solitary, \"irtually friendless figure. FBI agents questioned Nunnery and ex· amined fer ry records following the ferry mnnager·s inlervie1v "'ilh the AP. The fBI has repeatedly declined comment on its investigations. Bremer had been seen in Mihvaukee at a \\';illacC" celebration just 211 blocks from his ;ipartment on April 4. the nigh t of the \Visconsin primary. It was in the next day or t1vo. according to Nunnerv, that Bremer appeared at th·e ferry offiCe on the Milwaukee docks with the uniden- tified man. Wicks ~~ I n O.K. I promJs.! II W11'19 not rmjoying oursmvss, we '// , ___ ly.· Nunnery sa id Bremer'!! companion talked excitedly about moving a political campaign from \Visconsin to Michigan, but never named a candidate. ··This is \\"ha t made the \\•hole thing so impressive on me -the Greek telling me ho\v hard he's working in this field ." Nunne ry said. '"It sounded like he l'+'as taking a \\'hole group from Wisconsin tn l'vlichigan. Some were going to drive and some fly." \\'hen they left, Nunnery said, he peekPri out his office \l•indow hoping to see a bumper sticker or some other insi~ni~ on th eir car identifying the candidate they 11·ere supporting. There were no visibl(' si,1?ns. he !';<lid, but recalled seein~ a third person sH!in;? in the back seal. slight of build and .,.,·1th hair long enough so he could not determine whether the person .,.,·as a man or a 1\·oman . A long-haired young man of slii;:ht builrt came with Bremer to a gas station ne.:ir Bremer's home at least twice in recent weeks to ha\"e tires repaired. according to R station mechanic. Jerry Stone. r\unnery said he told Bremer <ind the other man that he could not make ad· vance reser,·ations at this lime of \"ear. \Vithin another day or l\vo, Bremer registered at the \Valdorf·Astoria Hotel in Ne\V xork Cit y and was there April 7·8, accord ing to hotel reco rds . 'r"et by the evening of April 9, Breme r was back in ~1ilwaukee in time to catch the 8: 15 p.m. ferry for the six·hour trip 10 Ludington. Ferry records li st his n.:ime and !he license number of his 1967 blue Rambler. now impounded in Maryland. Records on the Ludington side of Lake Michigan list Bremer as returninjit to Milwaukee on the 8:07 p.m. ferry April 28 . Bet"1•een these tv.·o ferry I.rips - on April 15 -Bremer was tickete( for speeding in Bingh::imton . N.Y. The Baltimore Sun reported that. at 2: 15 a.m. on April 15. Bremer checked in· to the Sheraton Motor Inn in New Car- rollton, Md .. a 15-m inute drive from the Laurel Shopping Center where Wallace wa s shot. The Sun said Bremer stayed lhret days and tried to check in again the weekend before the shooting but was told the motel was filled. Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey, another Democratic presiden· tlal candidate, attended a political breakfast In the motel that morning. On Ma y 9, Bremer took his third ferry trip, arriving In Ludington about noon. He was !potted at mldafternoon the rollowing day ln Cadillac. Mich., 72 mJles from Ludington, where WJ.llace was to Speak at an evening rally. He was seen 1111 Dairy Queen drive.In •bout 3 p.m. by an 1&-year..,ld high school 11r1. reportedly WIS spotted at ID iM between 4 and I p.m., ind was aee.n by at leut W.. ptrsons and photosr1pbed 11 the W1llae1 rally where he sat ' In the Wrd row. • DAME MARGARET RUTHERFORD Br itish Actress, 80, Dead British Actress Dame Rutlierfor4 S11 cc u1nbs at 80 LO\'DON (AP ) -Dame ~fargaret Rutherford. character actress known thr<Jughout the \\"Orld for her movie portrayals of eccentric Englishwomen , died today , her agent rfported. She was 80. As the mullichinned epitome of the up- per·c!ass English"·oman in tweeds, she was a favorite on both sides of the Allan· tic aod won a llnlly"'Ood Oscar as the duchess in "The V.J.Ps." Danie .\·largaret suftrred a hip lractura la st yrar. her second in six years, and v.·as hospitalized for siJ[ months. She returned lo her home in Buck· in gha mshJre early this year. "It l'+'as the complications that always set in "1'ilh old people after a serious !all that really caused her death," sald ber agent. Dorothy l\1ather. ~1iss .\lather said the funeral \\'OUld be Thursday al Gerrard"s Cross, in Qi:. fordshire . l\1iss Ruthlll'ford made her stage debut in 1925 at the O!d \'ic One of her first big hits "·as as i'oladame Arcarti. the bicvcl· ing medium in Noel Co.,.,•ard"s "Blithe Spirit.'' ""hich she played on the London stage and in the film . She first "isited the \;n1ted Stales In 1947 with John Gielgud, playing Lady Bra.ckneU in "The Importance of Being Earnest." Her hold on the American public was slreng thencd in the succession of great postwar British film comedies ·that included "'Blithe Spirit,'' "Passport to Pimlico,'' "i\1iranda." "The Ha ppiest Days of Your Life "' and "The Importance of Being Earnest.'' She was an obvious cho ice to create ~1 iss Jane 1'.larp!c. Agatha Oiristie's amateur detective. for the movies, and played her in ··~1 urder at the Gallop,'' "~urder She Said."' '"i\1urder ~1ost Foul" and ".\lurder .'lhov.'' In 1967, Queen ElizabC't h II made her a Dame of the British Empire. the female equivalent of kn ighthood . Actor Stringer Davis .,.,·as her husband.· l\l a rine General Dies CHRISTCHL:RCH. \'a . IAPl -Marine Brig. Gen. Robert Latane ~·lontague, 75, of t;rb~nna. died F'tiday.1'.Tontague won a battlefield commiss ion in \\"orld \Var I and servC"d in \Vorld \\lar JI. He was ~ \\1h1te House aide under Presi dents Calvin Colidge and Herbert Hoover. • • UPI T ....... Honolulu Winner Tanya Wilson of Haw . foot·8 , brown·eyed blondaU, t took lhe Ml" USA e w O over the weeken,d · · crown and 11 other flnaii.!::'i she the bomb blasu 11 the ~eard mar Beach Hotel "hlle J.'o- were parading ill •wi 11 before the judges. Sb:'•Ul14la she w11 too bury thi • .l.' •• about the pageant to itt"4 .. t about II . up. I 1 I • .Class Disncption Three Die Su spension s Spur -Leandro Stanford Vandals 'V endetta' STANFORD (API -Some Vtndaliam wu reparted at Stan.lord University alter a c1mpus judicial pal'ICI recom- mended lmmedlate and in- definite Mpenaions of thr'ee Stanford students for dlarup. ting a class taught by coo- troveralal pro!essor William Shockley. ' "Anyone who willfully disrupt.s classes doeii not belong in a university," a S-1 majority of the panel declared Sunday. Jt included · fa culty and students. Recommend e d for suspension were Donald Lee, a Junior from Austin, Tex.; Kwonping Ho, sophomore from Singapore ; end Al!ce Furumoto, a senior from Honolulu. The vandalism occurred at McCullough Building, \vhere the disrupted class was held --r ...... " . 'f ' ,,. • Jan. 18 and at 'T'rtsidder r ~~ Memor ial Union, the book.store 1 lc11,\:. ., ' and other buildings. '===-:=:;"?---"'\ Slogans like "Revenge th~ ' Shockely Three" were sprsy- painted on White P I a z a • Several freshmen volunteers worked last Satw-day to pn int out 11lmilar slogans painted on \Vhite Plaza earlier. The disrupted class in semi- conductor theory had sir studcnls. Shockley, who \\'On the ~obel prize for col nvention of the transistor, has been a target 'When G ra ndm12 comes out of the hos pltol,maybe or criticism due to his view 1he 1ll bri ng Q baby like Mrs. Dean did ." that genetic factors make---------------------blacks inferior in intelligence to whites. A final decision on the suspeMion& is up to the university president, Richard 1.yman, who usually follows the panel recommendations. SAN LEANDRO (API - The bodies of three young men, each shot in lhe head, \Vere found in a bungalow jll.!t out.side this city. Sheriff's Lt. Ray F. Souza said the killings ''appear to be ~----------. a vendetta." He did not elaborate and said an in- \•esUjlat.ion was continuing. Only one of the three vic- tims, all long-haired men in their 20s, was identified. The Alameda County coroner's of- Grappling Wrist W on rice said he ll'as Gary Gordon PETALL::'.11\ l.>\P) -1\ Kemp, 29, a truck driver \l'OO massive musclcn111n from lived across tbe street from Bristol, Conn. has captured the 2230 Sol St. address \\'here lhe bodies were found. this city'.~ m~l prlzed Kemp was found late Sun-possession -the \\'Orld's day in the front room of the wrist\\'restling champion- three-bedroom house located ship. on a.. tree-shrouded kno ll a few Ma urice Baker beat de- hundred yards from the fending champion Jim Do!· Ala meda County J u v en i I e cini. a Petalum:111 , \l'ilh llall. lie had been shot tv.·ice relative case n1 Saturday in the b~ck and once in the night's fina ls, pinning his Turly~s :Leap Cotati City Officials 'Not Wild-ey~d Radicals' head. police said. opponent's right ;1rn1 ln The other t\vo men s!ain had less than 30 scl'onds . COTATI (AP) -Since 2.5-probably be the san1e as in moved into the house about ·•r \l'aite:I ,1 vc.'lr for him yea r-old Annette l.ombardi April.'' six weeks ego, ofricers said. and I finally gOt hin1," saicl ! M. Lo b _,. ho They quoted nei ghbors as the JOO.pound B.'lker, who became mayor o this one-1Ss ni an.11, w co-owns say;"" -·"y =•ng perso"• 'Calaveras' Day Peaceful ANGELS CAMP (UPI) - ComtrucUon foreman Denny Matascie placed his frog in the "'arm sun. moved him to the starling circle and slapped the \\·ooden stage. In 1hrcc orfici11I leaps. "Tur- ly Locks." \\'ho 1vas found in a ~"·ri1n1l only four days ago, bounded 17 feet. 11 ~~ Inches to become the cro"•ned prince of frogdom at U1e Calaveras County Fair. Matascie of Mountain View. proml!ed to return the cham- pion leape r to his natural habitat on the San Francisco peninsula. Mast.ascle collected $300 flri;l prize money for his er.tty's jun1p, J;c, Inches 11hort of Lhe record. Jast year won the contest. Matascie, woo has been jumping frogs since 1966. said he \vas returning his champion "Turlv Locs" to the swamps, but wOuld search for him later this summer to jump in the Gustine and t..afayctte e\'ents of Northern California. Law Officer To Be Tried .. ~ ....... , J -"'' lost to Dolcini in last groc"y·slore town, she's been a student book shop, has been had visited the house recently. ki year's final . threatened with recall and ac· spea ·ng to civic groups to One of the two oUter vie-Jim Pollock of Palo Alto "convince them we're not a 1· shot · th •--d cused of trying to put police ims, once in e 1~ • and ti.is brother Ted of Orc- bunch of wild-eyed radicala." was found fully clothed in a gon State won the middle-officers on bicycles.· "\\1e used the established front bathroom . The other. d r. ii bl we ight and lightweight ti-"\Ve have a e in e pro em polit ica l and accepted proctss shot twice in the head. was ties and Fran Aye rs took with the older folks in this to gJ!t elected and we'll con-nude and apparently had been top honors in the "'omen's to"•n," she says. "They're tinue to use accepted means," taking a shov.·er in a rear division . afraid of us :'Ind ll'hat \~·e're J__:;s~he:_s:sa'.J<id":· _______ _".b:'_allllh:'roo~m':_. ______ _1======:-:==:---:::-l going 10 do." Their fears are groundless. she says. ''We" are A1iss Lombardi nnd t\1·0 other form er Sonoma Slate College s t u d e n t s , . Stephen Laughlin, 24, and Geoffrey Dunham, 29, who ousted incumbents last April and won three of five city council scats. f..1iss l.-Ombardi be ca me mayor by virtue of being top vote getter -with 360 -in this' toll'n of 1,650 residents. Cota t i is a small '.!-" " -. Mondty, M~ 22, 1972 DAIL V PILOT i Davi s Attorneys Plan Short Ca se SAN JOSE fUPll -With lhe Angela Davis trial en- tcrinl( its eighth u•eek loday, htr lawyers re-turn to C<>urt with an abbreviated defense thev said \\'Ould enable 1h<'n1 to -\1'i nd up the case this month. f..fiss Davis' a t tor n f' rs \Vednesday asked for a drlt1.v in opening thf'ir case-so th<''' could presf'nt a shortened clC'fense that could :<:f'nd the n1 u rd er -kidn11.1>conspiracy trial to the all-1\'hite jury by fhe end of ~1ay. In coiitrasf. the prosecution rnded its cast' again!lt lhr former UCLA philosophy in- slructor or:e \\'f'Ck ago nflcr celling 95 u·itnesses <ind en- tering 200 exhibits as stale evidenct. Chief df'fense a t I or n e y J{O\\'ard J\1oore, drclined to discuss defense l:'lctics rind even hinled to nr\vsn1cn that no \l'itnesses \l'outd be called nod fi nal nrgumrnts \\'Ould bt>i;:in nt once. The clcfense said lhe prosecutor pro\'ed nothing except that ~ll.<:!1 Dnvis \1•as a "\v11rn1. arliculritl• human being" \\•ho lo\'ed both Soledad Brother G e or g e Jackson and all humanity. Prosecutor Albert \V, f{arris Jr. contended that st a t e "'a, so in love with George Jackson that she hoped to gain his re.lease from priso n by the use of courtroon1 hostages. The state presented witnes:i;e! \1 ho test ified they sa"' f..1iss Davis near the f.1arln Count)' Civic Center '"'ilh Jona than Jackson, 17. the day before the kidnapings and shootinAs. Judge llarold llaley wa~ killed in an ('Scape v11n aton,:: \1'i!h Jonathan Jn('kson nnd two con\'icts \\'hom Jackson rele;ised from II :1 I e y 's c:ourtroon1 11 hil£' takinj! the judi.?e and rour others hos tai;r. r.tiss O a vis dis11pJ)('arcd :irter the Aug. 7. 1970 incident ;1nd was put on the FB l's most wanted list. She was <'npturcd in a Ne1v York n1ot£'l in Octnber ilnd extradiclcd t11 Cali forniA. ~ler ''love letters" to Georg~ Jackson \Vf're a ke~· s!ate ex~ hibH. In !11cm she spo~c or hC'rsc lf 11s Jtickson's "\1•ife'' even thouflh the l\~O had onlv 1nct once in 1.1 jail holrlir\~· rcll \l'it h their nttorn,,ys present. Jackson died in Au{!ust al S;in Quentin Pri~n 111 an nlleged escape attempt in 1\'hich three guards iind t\\'l> inmate trusties were killed. evidence was mo re lhrin THE 8 EST enough to convict J\1iss Daris Rea dership po 11 s prove of providing the guns for and "Pe11.nul.9" Is one of the helping plot the Marin County \\'orld's mo~t poSiu lRr comic k.d . s of 1970 .~lrlrs. nrnd it ally in the I nrip1ng · y !LOT 'I D . DAli~ p . 1_1_,_cr_i!'i_·_ c·o_n_tc_nd_s_"_is_s "'~''::"~=========' About 35.000 perS()ns "'ere in this Gold Rush country Sunday for the finals of the four-day International Froi; J ump Jubilee made famous in a short story by Mark Twain. O:>ld weather kept the crowd below half of the number that showed up in 1971, when the event was marred by violence, including one death, and numerous arrests. INDIO (AP) ' - A Blythe pollceman faced arraigllment I.Oday on a murder ch11rge in the fatal shooting of a ~1ex­ ican-American farm laborer, Riverside Dist. Atty. Byron !l·lorton said. The polietman, former Sgt. Richard Krupp. was charged with the shooting Tuesday of Marlo Barref'8.S, 23. Krupps, who was 0(£ duty, said he saw Barreras' car col- lide with a motorcycle and leave the accident scene, in- vestigators for the ruvenide County Sheriff 's office said. agricultural toy:n 50 miles north of San Francisco where about a third of the residents attend nearby Sonoma State Colleg~. 1.1iss Lo m bard. i believes the three new council members won because of th~se 'younger voters. Campaigning door to door, she said they had problems with voters aged 30 to 50, but "with people over 50 we had a great reception." They':eo::rson additional Power pJants. Beefed up security forces reported only minor incidents as people stomped • n d cheered for thei r fa vorite of hundreds or .a,mphiblans en.. tered in the century-old con- tfst. California frogs swept the top places. "Salty," enter«! by Bill Moniz or G\131ine leaped 17-4 for second place. Moruz' entry Police said Barreras was shot after a four-minute chase whi ch ended \\'hen the farm laborer lost ct1ntrol of his car. Members of B I y th 's 11-fexican-American communJty protested the shooting in marches and kept a vig!I outside' the police station. The vigil ended when Krupp was charged with murder, The plump new mayor with curly brown hair takes her critics in stride and lauRhs about the mechan ics of small to"'ll politics. She note.s ther~ have been rumors of a recall election, but the earli~t it could be held would be next September .. so the studenta would have returned and the resu!U would 01/.IY Coast~ SoutJierI/. Qffers • 63Guaranteed Certificates ··Saturday Service ·The Insiders Club Eff~Annual Earnings 5.00%·5.13% Passbook. No Minimum. 5.75%-5.92% One Year Cerllficate $1,000 Minimurn. 6 .00%-6.18% Two to Five Year Certifica tes $5,000 Mlnimum. MAIN OFflCE: 9th &. Hiii, Los Angeles • 623-lJ~l O!!'ler ollices WILSHIRE •t ORAMMERCT !"LACE: J9JJ Wiishire Slvd,. L.A.• 388-1265 LA. crv1c CIEHTVI: 2nd & BroadWay • 626-1102 HUNTINGTON IUCH: 9t Huntiraton Cenler • (714) 897-1047 SANTA MONICA: 718 Wllsh\r1 Blvd.• 393-0746 SAN l"I ORO: •· J • ,., ' •• • --- 1 , ' 4 ....... ~~ . ' -· ~ ...... ~-· ' Up to 90 days loss of interest on amounts withdrawn before maturity on all certificate accounts. 10th & Paclllc • 831·2341 WEST COVINA= E•sll•nd Shoppin1 Cir.• 331·2201 f'ANOftAMA CITY: Remembe r when all you could fi nd on th e beach we re shells and seaweed? And occasio nally a piece of driftwood ? million s of gallons of water through purifying systems . one of the ways \Ve plan to provide additional electricity. Nuclearpower plants are clean, proven and smog-free . Art Llnkletter Th• ln1lder1 Club: A new way to beat Inflation. ~ts membershi p card permits you to buy nearly every· thing you need from the finest closed-door shO\\'- rooms at sutstantial sav· ings -appliances, furni- ture, stereo equipment, sporting goods, draperies and mUch, much more. You can even buy cars at the "fleet'' price and mobile homes and motor· cycles at substantial sav· ings. The Insiders Club also provide·s big dis- counts on tickets to sport· ing a nd entertainment events .•• plus a whole list of free services: safe deposit boxes, money or· ders, travelers checks, and notary services. Membership require- ment for savers-$2,500 minimum balance. Coast bor rowers nO\\I receive as- sociate memberships en- titling them to an outside refe rra l services. Ask about joining at any Coast office. 8616 Vin Nun BIVd •• 892·1171 TA"lANA: 18751 Ventuqi Blvd.• 345-86i.4 LONG ICACH: Jrd & Locust • 437·74tl CAST LOS ANG!lLS! !th & SOto •.2fi6.4510 DIAMOND IM: 318 011mond e1r Blvd. • 171 •) 59~7525 Daily Hours-9 AM to 4 PM ~n Saturd1)'1 - 9 AM to l PM fOUpl Civic Center) _..... .... :.11· ,.,. ____ __,.-...-~. _., 1 . COAST -·1! : ANO SOUTHERN FEDERAL SAVINGS • t..,.~~----·-r.,----. -~--..--' • Times have changed. Kids today find anything from beer cans to sewage. It needs cl ea ning up. Th en there's air pollution. And land pollution . But the big cleanup is beginning. The power behind it: electricity. In the years ahead, • electricity will pump more ·' ' Electricity will power machines to recycle every- thing from cans to cars. Electricity will run new air pollution control equipment. The additi onal demand for electricity will be enormous. To meet th ese new demands, Edison must be permitted to bu ild additional power plants now. And the transmission lines to deliver th at power. Nuclear power plants are Other ways to generate electricity are under intensive research or bei ng develo ped now. Meanwhile, existing methods are steadily being improved. El ectricity and a cleaner environm ent. Th e hvo go together. E An Equ~ OpoortlRllt/ Empioyor I ' , .. • D.AU.Y PILOT EDITOB.fAJ; PAGE Blunder: Proposition 9 Proponents of Proposition 9, the ao-c:alled .. cle&n environment initiative,'' are resortinc to various 1trala· gems in their zeal to ~1n a fayorable vote for the meas- ure June 6. Among these have been .use of the. names or. ~op officials of 34 (O!leges as endorsers of the propos1t1on when in fact tbey are not. 1.lore reprehensibh:, however, has been the effort to bamboozle YOters into believing opposition comes onJy from Hse-lf·serving big busi.ness" and ''other polluters." The fact Is that opposition. formally . stated, now ranges over the fulJ spectrum of Calif?~n1a society - 11mall business as weJI as bi g. elected off1c1als from Sf!lall town mayors to Governor Reagan, leade!s .of or gan.1zed labor, scientists in a \\•ide range of dlsc1phnes, agricul- tural leaders and small farmers. illustrative of the vie"'S of most opponents is the description of Proposition 9 given by a .four·man team of scieace·ed ucation labor and conservation leaders when they accepted the co-chairmanship or "Cal ifornians Against the Pollution Initiative." The~ cal!ed it "t~e most destructive measure fa ced by Callforn1a voters in decades." They added, "We are convinced that lit). \vould be totally counterproductive to the tr u e env~ronmental goals of mo st Californians. It \vouJd loc k env1ronm~~tal management standards int~ la~v. and preclude ut1hz~· lion of rapidly changing, sc1ent1f1~al ly·based ,t,echnolog1· cal advances 10 the field of pollution control. Afajor objections to Proposition 9 are several: -Its ban on nuclear energy development could. lead to power shortages and brownouts a~d forced '!ehance on air polluting fossil fuel s for electric generation. -Its arbitrary gasoline and diesel fuel standards could cripple the state's transportatl~n system. Forced Industry curtailment resulting from _ this co~ld cos.t thou· sands -perhaps more than a million -JObs, w~th t.he greatest Josses falling to lower income and m1nor1ty Undercutting All Rational Judgment (sYDNEY J. HARRI S) Jt'1 interesting, and a little sad, to see how people's minds work in air-tight compartments, so that what they believe in one area, they reject In another, We were talking about student protests, and nearly everyone at the table agreed that etudent, had no right eo break col- lege laws and regu- lations while engag- lng tn activities, even for the b e s t motives. Thm the CODVet'• utlon 1wilched to E d die Egan, the New York narcotics cop fea tured in "The French CoMee· tlon," who was drapped from the force just before hil retirement pension be- came due. De:tr Gloo1ny Gus rr those teen·age girls who drive their little foreign cars .so care· les!!ly could spend some time at the entrance to a hospital emer- gency room, they might slow down and drive more carefully. Not even a highly.skilled plastic surgeon can completely restore \\'hat was once a pretty face. --Q.G.M. t1111 h•lur• r.tlKl'l rfflltrr' •ln'I. fl'f lll«llirfh' ,,,_ '1 ,... ,,... ....... ,. $ ..... y.ur •ti "'"' ft • ._.., 01t1, Di lly Pl•t. thinking, however; we don't judge mat. ters on any finn principles . but according to whether we like or dislike who is doing what, and for \Vhich reason. Tn n1y view, both Egan and the col· legians are u•rong uhen they willfully break the law and resort to violence in any fonn. And Egan is even more culpable: the students are young and ig· norant, but he is supposed to be mature and, moreover, is sworn to uphold the Joy,·, whether or not he personally agrees with Jt. IF POLICE bureaucracy does restrain AND NEARLY everyone at the table officers from effectively nab b Ing agreed that Egan was "morally right" In nal't'otics pu shers -and I'm sure It does II d t -then Egan and his fellow policemen bending or subverting po ce epartmen should work to get the laws~.changed or regulations so that he could break out of tlie red tape and apprehend more I-he regulations adjusted. To take the law narcotics offenders, tn this case, they into one's O\vn hands is far more heinous · h for a p0Hcen1an than for a colle.qe thought, tl\'O wrongs did make 8 rig t. student, for this attitude 1trikes at the But this \\.'as only because they d\sap-. pro\"e of collegiate activists and appro\'e very roots of civil peace and justice. ol pallce crackdowns on narcotics ''et most people are willing to loolc the pushers. They could not see that the two other u•ay, or even to applaud ~gan as a instances are qu ite similar exa mples of a "hero .. " u•hile at the same time con- moral question · does a right end justify a '-.df.ffini.n11: ~l~nts who nout college rules \vrong means?· ~heir ends. This sort o.( .sub- YOU CAN'T HAVE It both ways; )'OU fan'L 1ay that the people you disapprove of must work within thti law. but those )'OU approve of may l'-"ork outside of it This U: our favorite form of crooked jectivlsn1, this rorm or moral relat1v1sm. undercuts oll Tational judgment and makes a mockery of "fairness WKier the law.'' There can be no more dangerous exception to this doctrine th~n the policeman in a hurry to make a pinch. Legislative Frustration By BOB MON~GAN A11embly J\llnorlty· Leader Historically, it has been In the com· rnittees of the Ltgisl:iture that con· trovtrslat bllls were quietly laid to relit. Votea \\'ere by \'Oice only, and at times it W•s Jlterall y imposslblti: to tell u1hich members volr.d "nt1y." If the bill \YAsn·t approved, It ne~·er left U1e committee. ,Since votes are now recorded tind wbllshed for public scrutiny. it is poss!· bfe to single out legislators "'ho con· slsttntly vote against important l~w en- forcement leglslaUon. The results art no surprise. Dli:rttOC&ATS OS the Criminal Jusllce committee have turned doy,•n three pro- P\)SAIS in recent wer:ks u•hich ''"'Ould ha\'e l_Cfl a hand to law tnforctment officinls. A,JUlou.gb the vote.1i on e11ch bill differed slightly, it \\'IS ln each case a com· blnatlon ol five Democratic meo.mbe.rs w~ich knled tho legisl1tion. For Instance. under ulstlng law it is not a crime for a person who has been ~ .. baU to wmrully fall to appear f<r lliJ appointed <OOrt date. Ile may f<tfelt bail or bt dted fot <00temp1 or ""1t. ltlll It Is oot a alme. Republican Nsemblymao Frank Ml!rpby of Santa Qm Introduced )filalatloo mtltlnJ such .~bolled defendant iuJJty of either a lelCllly or mbclemeanor, &!pfndina Oil the ....,u, ol tlto orlalnal crlrnt. WHEH m inLL came btrore the ............. Qimln1l JUlll<e com. ~ jWo ~atlc rn<n1ber1 TOltd •· -. wtallled. and ..,. ns ~ abi;ent . Since a measure requires fh·e ar- firmotlve voles for passage, the bill \Vas promptly halted. As a means of protecting the safety or prison gu11rds. I introduced legislation el'lrlier thi s session making it a felon y for a prisoner to start an unauthorized fire in a penal institution. The bill was assi~ned to the same committee. This time three Democratic members voted "nay," one abstaintd. and the samt one was absent. The four affirmative Republican votes lvere not enough to nKl\te 1he bill to the floor for a full Assembly vote. PINALLY, A MEASURE to •lio" 11:trictly controlled electronlc sur,·eillance (••iretapplng) b~ la1v enforcement or- fk'ials under certRin circumstancts \\"11!1 given the same unfavorable treatme.nt. Changing positions only slightly. the five DcmocraUc members this lime rtcordt:d four •·nays" with the fifth one stJU absent. Oddly. none abstained. \Vhether casting a negative vote. ab- staining, or mertly bting absent. these five mtmbtn alont have shut the door on important lt:glslatlan which would ha\'e betn a welcome assi.rt to law en- forcunent .officials, L"' THE CASE OF electronic survelllanct, It Is intuesting to note that 14 stales ere currenlly using 1 system similar to tbe: ooe propOled wlth a cor- re&pondilll drop Jn tho crime rate. If an all.out attack on aime is to be 1uc- •essful, n hive to aJve authorltlu the tools to pmk!o more ~ l'Uul workers least able to afford them. -Its pesticide restrlcttoni pace a threat to public health, food production and household protection alike. -Revenue losses to state and local govemment.s are estimated in the billions of dollars, if the measure passes. These are not the conclusions of a "pro-polluter!' They are !hose of Dr. Emil M. Mrak; University of Call· fornia·Davis chancellor emeritus, one of those who ac- cepted leadership of the campaign against Proposition 9. On e disturbing fa ctor in the campaign to defeat lhis badly-conceived measure is the series of adverti5e"' rnents against 1->roposition 9 now appearing statewide. Scare tactics used in the series could be counter-produc- tive, causing voters to favor the measure -0n grounds "nothing'toul d be that bad." U the 01ds do produce such a reactio n on a large scale, Jt wou ld be most unfortunate. Fo r ·if ever there \ver e a blundering effort at la\Ymaking·by-inltiati.Ye, Proposition 9 is it. Proposition I ··· YES HO\V about a governmental operation involving S2.175 billion that has performed a valuable !unction and never cost the taxpayers a dime? Doesn't happen very often, docs it? \Ve11, that is the story of the Veterans Farm and Home Building Bond Program-<ommon1y called Cal Vet loans-since it was initiated in 1946. We wiJI be asked on June 6 to approve Proposition 1 for the issu· ance of $250 million more in bonds to benefit some of the 600,000 Vietnam veterans in California today, a number that is increasing by 8,000 a mon th currently. The Cal Vet record is nearly spotless. There is every reason to support Proposition 1 on the June ballot. De1nocratic Party Leaders Deeply Co1acerned McGovern Causes Shock and Alarm WASHINGTON -Sen. G e o r g t ifcGovern's unexpected emergence as a Democratic frontrunner Is c a u s I n g widespread tremors of shock and alarm among party leaders and stalwarts. The jarring possibility is· dawning on thfm that they m.iy find themselves en- cumbered w i t h a Presidential stand- ard bearer who is an out-and-<:iut ultra- leftbt. I>eeply concerned Democratic officials and authorities all over the country are discovering on close scrutiny that McGov. t"tn. instead or being the "new populist," as his propagandists are busily portray- ing him , is actually, in the words or Sen. Henry Jackson, the champion and spear- head of the "new extremism." And to leave no doubt of exactly what he means by that scathing Charac- teriiatlon, the veteran \Vashington state Senator adds: "J\1cGOVERN HAS become the Epokesman or some of the most dangerous and destructive currents in American politics, The stark re.ility is that the extremism of the left is gaining ominous ground in the ~mocratic party. The main vehicle for this suicidal drift is the candidacy of McGovern. "Although he has adopted the extremist rhetoric and pooition of the discredited campus rad icals, polls show that most Americans are unaware of bow far he has gone. I am convinced iicGovern means what be says. That's the trouble. Because if this drift continues, the Democratic party will pay dearly in November." This Is unusually harsh talk for • liberal of Jackson's impeccable and long- standing record -32 years in Congress. steadfast labor supporter, intimate of President Kennedy, his hand-picked choice for Democratic N a t i o n a 1 (ROBERT S. AI .I.EN) Chainnan. Whatever else Jackson may be charged with, he is not "an old guarder" or "Red baiter." SO IN BLUN'JL Y branding McGovern 1s a dangerous radical and extremist, Jackson Is not only publicly giving voice to his own profound concern but that or a wide spectrum of other equally disturbed Democratic leaders. Highly significant, itcGi>vern has so far carefully ignored these public blasts and groy,•ing alarm at his extremi.!m. The South Dakotan and his inner ad· visers (all long.time Kennedyites) have discussed this potentially exp Io s i v e development a number of times - with widely divided counsel. Some have urged a head-on and defiant denuncia tion. Others have advised saying nothing -pointing out that the great mass or voters are unaware of the castigations, and most or the press is saying and doing nothing about them. Remarked one McGovern lieutenant, "\Vhy st.Ir up the animals? If our o~ position can't do It, why should we help them by calling attention to '"hat they are howling about." IN THE FA CE of this divided opinion, McGovern is marking time. But revealingly lndicative that the bare-knuckled hammering of Senator Jackson and others is getting under McGovern's skin is the backstage pus5yfootlng and denying that his close hen'chmen are engaging in. For example: Pierre Salinger, press secretary of President Kennedy, now a pa id member of ~tcGovern's campaign stt1ff, is telephoning ne\1;smen explaining and temporizing hi! boss's stand on school busing, legalization of marijuana and abortions. As Salinger mellifluously expounds it, McGovern doesn't mean ex- actly what he might be understood to mean . r.itaybe so. But Senator Jackson is call- Ing the turn on McGovern natly and directly and hasn't been denied as yet. One reason is -the South Dakotan can't deny it. The record is irrefutable. THAT EXPLAINS his tight·lipped silence in the race of the scaldingly pro- vocative denunciations. Currently, he has only two courses ; admit the potentially torpedoing accusations, or attempt to mushmouth and .finagle th em as Salinger is trying to do behind·the-scenes. But if A!cGovern should get the nomination, he would then be able to back·and-fill and hem·and-haw all o\·er the place with little fear of being challenged within Democratic ranks because of the danger that would disastrously boomerang agaimt state and local Democratic candidates. Throughout the country they ll.'ould be under urgent compulsion to hold their peace because disunity could be ruinous for all of them. At least that is the likely .strategy to be expected of McGo\'ern. It's largely self- evident. But so also is the record of ex· tremism and radicalism be i.s ex- poundin11; what Senator Jacboo tersely labels "Tht> i fcGovem Doctrine ... that would be • disaster for the American peo- ple." FOILOwtNG ARE Kl:Y l<nels of lhi1 ultra-leftist. doctrine: -Busing school childrt:i acJ~7 Lo achieve racial balanct. -$40..plus billion a yu:r ~, !i! tann from taxpayers earning mr.n t!-a llt./M and giving it to thost ~ f&ofi!I ~--r.J that. Also those mllr.( ~ bn $50.000 a year to ht ret;"~--~ :.~ ;.17 7i percent of the amCM'.J. •?.r,na • :: ~ taxes. -Guaranteed annual rr.:,1-11t •,! '" l\fh for family of four. -Slash the defense budget by $39 bi\lion -approrimately 45 percent -at a time \Vhen Russia is greatly expanding it s y,•or!d\\'ide naval and air strength. Also cut the n:itlon's anned forces by around 45 percent -from 2.S million to J.7 mill ion. To this end, P..fcGovem would reduce U.S, troops in Europe by one-half, and virtually entirely in the Far East. To all intents, he would junk the NATO alliance, and drastically modify U.S. tie9 with and in suppcrt of llrael. -GRANT FULL AMNESTY to draft· dodge(s, deserters and defectors. -"Reliberalize" tht U.S. Supreme and other Federal courts. -Radically ''reorganize•• and ''overhaul" the Fat, y,·hich itcGovem has repeatedly attacked in t.>xtremist terms. Illustration : C.Ondemnation of the late director J. Edgar Hoover as ..a "menace to ... citizens." -Establish u·hat in·effect would be a distinct form of socialize"d mtdicine. -Internationally, pursue a generally Isolationist policy, with a stroog overtone or close diplomatic and trade ties with Russia, Red China and other Communist countries. including Cuba . Addendum: As part of McGovern's st rategy in California's crucial June I primary, he has launched a vigorous drive to win the considerable Chicano vote. A lot of money from Hollywood and other theatrical P..fcGovern supporters ia going into this campaign. A number or )'OUng Chicano activ~ts are being ad.nd to McGovern's already big paid eleo- lioneering staff to round up votes among their people. The inside word is that McGovern Is earmarking $2 million for his California scramble, with at least $500,000 for television splurging. In Ohio, where h& ume in second, his campai~ cost more lhan $300,000, Says one A1cGovern in-- ~: ''Easy come, easy go. We are get .. t:n~ a lot of money and we are spending it ~'lly not! That's paying oU." Probable: More Trade With Russia The pen that inks 1 trade agreement may yet prove mightier than the sword. \Vhile t<.tosCO\V and \Vashington continue to exchange menac ing statements about the U.S. mining or North Vietnamese coastal waters, they are pressing ahead with plans lo exchange agricultural and industrial products.- Expansion of U .S·Soviet trade tt•ould be mutuall y advantageous. This country·.s trade deficit ol $2 billion In 1971 - America's first trade deficit of the 20th century -has spurred .an intensive search for new export markets. The Soviet Union represents the largest marlcet available, and it Is relatively un- tapped. For their part, the Russians w41nt to improve industrial producUvlty v.·lth American tcclu1ology 11nd enrich the Soviet diet with American grain. In 1971 the Soviet Union importtd almost $3 billion \\'Orth of goods, of \\'hlch only $160 million came from the United States. But the Commerce Department ,__ __ B g George ---. Otar George: • , You're always making snide comments about the lo\'e genera· lion, Don't you lhlnk ii 11 the first duty of • fU!t human being to love eve.rybody? BEADS Dear Beads: I wed to, until thlt blonde In •~ .....ting betted me one In the eye 11 tho last ol!Joe pony, EDITORIAL RESEARCH estimates ,that U.S. exports to Russia could climb to $1 billion within five years and add 60,000 jobs to the American econ· omy. CERT AJN TRADE agreements already have been reached or are in the works. A $125 mJillon deal concluded last OCtober pro\'ided for the exchange of America n mining and oil-drilling equipment for Soviet metal~. And Tenneco Inc. Is look· Ing into a f2 billion achcme to liquefy natural gas from Siberian fields and transpor t it to this country in cryogenJc tankers. The ground roles or Soviet.American trade are ln nttd of change. PauJ E. Pau· ly, a.s1L1itant dlrtetor of the Bureau of International Commerce, said in an April 25 spe<cb that "II will bt dlllicult w achieve rully tubstantial lnmasts in trade .•. without providing for U.S. H· port credit faclllUes to help market our products fully competitive with those from \Vestern Europe and Japan. or wltbout ••• extending most·favored-na· lion tAr!rf treatment (to) Soviet goods." A rectnl article by lzvtsUa politic:il commelltator Vikenty At1tve1ew attmod w Indicate tbel the Soviet Ulkln -Wllh Pauly'1 ·amsmi .. t. "In order that Sovllt·Amtt!con trade be blllll DD a OOUDt1 foaDda'\ioo, • Kolvtytv 'lmlle, "II • is necessary •.. to abide b7 ~ ;nu- ciples of equality ot the sidu r.:A .W.1,e~ advantage." He added that "tf ._~ ~ about markets and raw mat.trial .,..i·z1;..t then reasons for conflict (bet.rec ~ two countries) are lacking." FOR YEARS, Ru ssia's unpaid~ Lease debt from World War II itood in the way of a broad U.S.-Soviet trade agreement. The United States bas offered to settle the debt for $800 million. ac· cording to former Commerce St-cretary Maurice H. Stans, and Sovlet oflic~1l1 have offered $.'100 million. A n authoritative source asserts that the Russians "feel they have gone more: than haU·way toward easing the way for trade conc~ssions by agreeing to reopen (Lencj... Lease) negotiations." Trading with the Soviet Union entalil Quotes SU.. Castn, tltt. director S..F. thild care center -"Pllf Is 1 most vital crcaU\·e funcUOn and If we can make It rich, lhe best that II human will !lourlob within the child. I am opposed to the custodl.111 idea ol dlJ care." • Do....., 1fltlle. ........,. -.. mollter, 11 jOll equU\y -··tbey pay "' less but our work 1' much easl!r. l woold ioff to ~liberated buU llk<t bavtoc ao euitr I": tltu the ...... • . ntb " •ell as advantagts. A3 Htrbert a"lt.(a rttenlly noted In the Baltimore 15~ R.utiJ is not a signatory of the in- ~.nal patents convention. Thus, it b:tt r.t1"fl bouaht samples of a foreign- r:..V,.. ~ solely for c o p y I n g """"""'· ft lt•"'ill be remembered also that the Krmthii kl6U upon trade as more of a polltit:al than an eamomic weapon. On more than one occal\on Moscow bu ihown its displeasure with a foreign country hy H\'erlng all trade ties. For the moment, though, the United St.Illes appears willini to take !ta cha.nets. OIUNOI COAST DAILY PILOT 'l. . \ OA/LY PILOT ,.: ( Phil lnterlandi Official Builds Island Paradise Poes Y0.r Chlld ,NH4 SUMMER SCHOOL Enroll NOW In tfle b11t - ••1 get througtt the whole skiing season without an aCcident and tlien I get hlt in th ekrieewith a golf ball!" L.M. Boyd Chocolate Bars Don't Cause Acne No longer do the medical boys contend chocolate bars cause acne. What's eaten has little to do with those annoy- ing blemishes on the face, they claim . Like baldness and fl at feet-yeah, flat feet , ~that affl iction called acne, however temporary, tends to be inherited , it's now said. A hormone thing. ' . -~HISTORICAL footnotes indicate the great Benjamin FrankJln devoted considerable lime teaching the guitar to pretty girls, the rascal. By J. PAUi.. WYATT 1 CONTADORA I SL AND. 1 Panama (UPI) A millionaire cardboard b o x manufacturer who "fell in love" with an uninhabited South Pacific island three years ago bas perSQnall v set out to open op for tourism the hllhe!1o forg(ltten P e·a r l Islands. Gabriel Lewis Galindo, \Vho manufactures boxes f o r bananas, was fishing \Viih friends on his yacht ·about 40 miles south of Panama C11y when his engine conked out. Lewis made it safely to Con- tadora Island where he put in for repairs. "I simply fell in Jove with the island," he recalled in ao interview. "The next day when I got back to Panama City I made inquiries, found out who the owners were and sent an employe around to buy the island ." "I thought the ov.•ners would ask about $25,000," he s.'lld. ''When n1y emplo)e returned. he said the owners wanted too much. He said thev insiste.1 on $6,000 and he had ·held out for $5,000. The next day thev had their money, and I had my island." At once, Lewis began to) make the island habitable for three-hour boat ride from Panama City too tiring, so he ordered the construction of a 3,000-foot landing strip for light planes. Then he proceeded to clear the beaches. hack out paths later to become paved roads telephones installed . By hls own estimate, Lewis invested $2.5 million in Con· tadora. Ji.1eanwhile, he bought 10 more islands in tne WEIRD looking critter. that Greek god Pan. A fright, in fact . Hi s name inspired our word "panic." I/ THAT Daniel Boone never ever wore a coonskin cap is also known, although not widely. SERGEANT -Q. "Louie, my boy; can you name the horse that was pro- moted to sergeant in the U.S. Anny?" A. That was a mare. Called "Reckless." An ammo packer in Korea . She also got a medal for bravery under frre, incidentally. Now let's see you name the horse that wu ordained a priest. Q. ;'FORT KNOX ever been robbed?" A. Not even burglarized. "DON'T boy babies cry more than girl babies?'' A. Absolutely. Up to sl.J: months. Then the girl babies start to bawl more. But why I canit say. . . WENT WANTS to know what fleet buyers look for first when they pick out a new line of cars. Gas mileage? No sir. And not speed, not looks, either. Resale value, that's what. Second thing said buye rs examine, predict· ably, is initial cost. Third thing, maintenace problems, if any. They can do without those repair bills. Likewise. YOUNG LADY, if you don't knd.w who has everything. consider a pet. The tradition dates far beyond a pair of pandas and a couple of musk oxen. All the way back to the Queen of Sheba, at least . To King Solomon. who had mines plus , she gave one chimpanzee , three eag les, a four- in-hand team or horses and a brace or camels. He thought that dandy. WORLD'S first successful electric iron heated up to a most particularly high tempera ture at the front tip. A desirable feature, said the makers. So ·they called it a "Hotpoint," and what followed was a whole line of appli- ances so trademarked. TAKE those birds that sleep wi th their bills tucked into the feathers tmder their wings. Why ls a mystery, but virtuall y all of the same doze off thusly with their heads to the left, not the right. ' I ,I I ii Address mail to L. M. Boyd, P. 0 . Box 1875, New- port Beach, Calif. 92660. '! Couple Give Away Babies, Regret · 1 t ·1 'i DES MOINES, Iowa (UPI) - A young couple who gave away their two daug~ters because they were "confused by city life" said they are determined to follow a judge's advice and "return to the slraight life". so they can reclaim the childrrn. Robbie Apple, 20, and his wife Pamela, 19, spoke quietly of giving Rachel, 2, to state welfare officials last year, calling Des Moines police lo come and get &-month-old Arma three weeks ago, and appearinl? before ju v en i I e authorities. "We just didn't know what ft were doing," Apple iiaid . "We weren't happy here, and we were confused. But now we're going to fight like tigers to gel those kids ti.ck." Juvenile Court Judge Don Tidrick told !lie Apples, who Singer Quits LONDON (AP) -Peter Grteo, wbo earned more than $200,000 as a pop music star with the F1cetwood M a c llJ'OUP· cut his long hair, gave his money to charity and went to work 11 a bospttal porter. "I jg t want to do IOl!letbing ust1w:• be npwn..i. admit they have led a nomadic 1 existence wandering from city to city during their two years ~ of marriage. that the only way 1' they can get Rachel and Arma back is to become "good · citizens." He gave them six months to find new friend s. begin working regularly, and 1 establish themselves a!'I "responsible citizens." The case came b efore Tidrick after Polk County of· flcials petitioned to have the children declared neglected an d placed in foster homes permanently. Apple, who said he hasn't had a regular job since drop- ping out of high school, said he would meet Tldrlck 's require-r men ls. "Pm lookin~ for a job now," he said . "That's the first step to / getting Rachel and Arma back." Tidrick said both chlldren will be placed In fos~r horn" here until he m!'l'kel a finr.I decision. He said by giving the young couple a chance to change their life style he was "pressuri n"" them Into deciding whether or not they re ally want !he children . "OUr thought Is that the AP' pies can look rfil rosy without any responsiblllty," he sald. "We want them to get in- volved with !lie children by paying child 'support and YLJ~ing them." 2 YARDS FOR No iron finish. 58·'~/60~' polyester double knits. In Jacquard weaves. mini waf fles, crepes. twills. Machine wash . Tumble dry. FINISHED YANITY $29.96 2 day1 only Fonnica covered vanily \\'ilh splash ba ck comes in white and coloNl. Faucet not included. HAIR CONDITIONER 2 DAYS ONLY 88' Alberta Ba lsam® in sta nt ha ir con ditioner. 8 fl. ot. or 16 applications. USE YOUR KMART CHARGE OR BANKAMERICARD SAYE! &l ·COUIT llSULATED CUPS 2 Pays Only 3 PKCiS. 99c Large 7·01. plostic foom cups ore Ideal for port let ondpicnics. Keeps drinks hot or cold longer. Sovel archipelago and a portion or an elever.th. ._.. .... , .... ti refurbished and a Ir.con-elephant. a peacock, !\ srork ditloned. and other bird s on the Joo:.t>. I l'(IOM OHi! 01' THI OLDEST & DRJGHTl!ST li!ATl!O ICHOOLI Tr•ntp~l"!•llOll "' •II .,,,, J\1ore thnn 40 private homts There has been a rcsurgE'nce1 have been or arr Jn the proc· in the once-thriving pearl CALL NOW ess of being built . a11d Le\\'is busi11ess abandoned In the: 774 .. 1osz "Y.le "'ant to convert Con· tadora into a be achhead, a kind of showroom leadi ng to the exploitation of the other islands in the group by expert s Jn international tourism/' he explained. ttported he sold all 15 hom es 1930's '"'hen a comblnntion (lf1 Falrmo"t P,rivate !ehoot in a p!'oject for retirees :it over-fi shing and d Isl! as t 1157 w. Mei.le, AHMlm $20,000 apiece even before' __:d(j<e";c~im~•'!<ted~ttllh.<:e~o)'.'YS'!<te~c:_tb<~·<!:ds':_._]' b.;.;;;;....,.,.,,,;,..,...,...,..,. th ey had bt"Cn completed. - Lewis already has signed an agreement for the develop- ment of 'Contadora with the Melia hotel chain of Spatn. The new company, Desarrollo Turistico Melia·Panama, S.A., y..•ill begin by construcling a $4 million, 163·room hotel. For lhe time being. L<>\vis has 17 tv.'0-bedroom house tran'ers, purcha sed from the Panamanian government after the Central America n and Caribbean Games in 1970 when they were used to house athletes. They have been Lewis h8s plans for a nine- hole golf course. a marina fnr yachts, an artificial fresh- water lake and stables for riding horses. He already has some Shetlnnd ponies, a baby • Dole Toll LONDON (AP ) -Britain is spending more than $14 million a week on unemployment benefits and $8.4 mill ion more on supplementary f a m i 1 y allowances to the jobless, the government reported . Adv1r1lum~11t What Do Many Doctors Use When They Suffer Pai#, Of Hemorrhoidal Tissues? Exclusive Fonnula Gives P rompt, Temporary Relicl Jn Many Cases from Such Pain. Also Helps Shrink. Swelling of Such Tissues Due to Infection. In a survey, doctors "'ere asked many cases .Crom .pain: itchiil.t what thl'y use to relieve such in hemorrho1dal tissues. And 1t painful symptoms. Many of the actually helps shrink painful doctors rr porting said they swelling of isuch tissut>S when eithe r use Preparation H them-infected and inflamed. Just se" selves or in their office practice. i£ docto r·tested Preparation H• Pr('paration H gives prompt, doesn't help you. Ointment oc temporary relief for hours in suppositories. ·:i:;cr.:~::::§~::::::::::.::::;:;:;:;:::::;:::::::::::::::;.;:::::;:;:;:::;.::::::::::::::::::::::::o;::::'::::~-:::'~<:::;"..::::::x:;.~::::..W..~~~ m DAILY 10-10, SUN. 10·7 ~ ...... FAMOUS BRAND 'l'owELS :; TUES., WED. ONLY i ~ . ·;;:';::::::~":::::!§.»!::Z.;:;:*:::M::::~;:;.;~:::~::::;.:::::::::::=:~:;:o;:;;::m:~::::~::~~W.:O:~:;::~~~~. ""'ir' ft '~: .. f 1 ..... .:;, ~ I l . ' PATENTED ROSES J. FAMOUS BRAND PAPER TOWELS Specially priced at Kmart for those spring cleaning days ahead. LIMIT IO PER COUPON ---Kmart Coupon _ __, K··MART MOWER BARGAIN MODEL KM 100 saa.oo Features 19·inch stagg ered w h e e 1 design. 3 hosepower motor has recoil-start engine. Seven· in ch poly wheels. e n g i n e control at handle. cOmes in attractive green color. DECORATOR THROW PILLOWS Reg. 1. 97-2 Day• f 7xl 7" pillow1 witli up· holstery fobri c covers, shredded vrethone fll· llng . ln lovely colors. 2 Days Only 1.97 ~ Your c:hoicc of rose bushts 'l"irlt 4 Of. more canes. Sclccr1011 includn rtd : Cri mson Glory, Poinsetiia, Mirandy; Yellow: Col· den Charm , Peace; two-tone Talisman; pink or white roscs , also., DECORATIVE TREES 2 Pays Only REG. 9.97 REG. 14.88 $6.27 $9.27 Natural looking 5'. to 6' polyethylene lrer!'I h:i.ve wash· able leaves. Branches can be shaped a.~ dP~ircd. Use your Kmarl Credil Card. KIPPERED SNACKS 2 FOR 2s~ 2 days only. 3 1'. oz. of fillet• of Herring, i;llghtly smoked flavor, 30 GAL. TRASH CAN 2 DAYS ONLY 2~·s.oo Sturdily constructed galvan ized sheet steel trash can with ti ght filling cover and handy carrying handles. I I J ·1 ~· DAlLV PILDT Monday, M1y 21, 1'1 r:! He's Novelist, Policeman Wambaugli Says He Loves Both; 'Has No Answe~ I ' ' I Dr. Marvin Gold1nan examines one of 1,000 barkless Beagles used in 15-year study at Uni- versity of California on effects of low-level nu- clea r radiation on the environment. By KIJ\~IS llENDRICK Cl1rlstia1• Scit1•ct AfonUor Strvice LOS ANGELES -Everybody knew the good·lookjng younl( Engll1h prof just lau,llht 'venin11s. Vntll he ral,,ed the question one night. nobody knew how he earned his Jiving otherwise. l. aw ye r? Accountant? Draftsman? Vacuum cleaner salesman? Viollnist? The college class gue ssed everythinJ, but Judge Invalidates Bed, Board Divorce Pl'ITSBURGll (U Pll - A judge hM rul e d that Penn!lylvanla's "bed and board" divorce decree un- constitutional because It Is awarded only to women. Judge John G. Brosky or Allegheny Cour.ty Court o r Common Plea~ b:t~ed his decb;ion on a !ilate con- 2 Sites Urgc1l As Landmarks SACRAMENTO (AP) -The slitutional amendment which p r o h i b l t 11 discrimination because of sex. Brosky'11 decl.!lion came ex- actly one year after the amend- ment was approved by the voters. old Post Office in San Jo~ .and the 1.fount Saini f\1ary·~ Convent and Academy in Nevada County have bttn reco1nmeded as stale hi.~torir.nl landmark!! by a stnlewide CQmn1ittcP. Under common law dali11g hack to 1735 . women in Pennsylvania ha\Pe bee r permitted by the bed and board tradition lo I i "e s eparate I y from their husbands while retaining other rig hts of marriage. The husbands were legally barred from remarriage. Bro s ky spt-eirically In- validated The Bed and Board Divorce Act of 1929 which aranted "legal separaUon'' privilege only to ~·ives. He noted most of the 4,000 divorce suits filed in AlleghPn~· County an nually begin a11 btd and board actions. The rccomn1end11tion fl'orn the Ca lifornia II is Io r i c a I J,nndmark~ Advisory Com- mittee. if llnall y apnroved by the director ot the State Departmerit of Park• and Recreation. w o u Id mean a r:;tate-supplitd bronze: plaque for the building!. Brosky's decision was on an appe al of a bed and board suit which had bten filed by Mrs. Helen Corso of suburban Penn HUis against her hu!band, Anthony Corso. BREATHTAKING DESIGN AND TEXTURE DO SOMETHING BEAUTIFU~ •.. for the glory of fine iji1monds. A. Interlocking bridal set. 18 karat white or yellow gold. from $850. B. Diamond solitaire in 18 karat textured yellow gold, from $295. C. Pear shape dlamcind Ovorilp bridal set, 14 karat textured yellow gold, from $450. D. Marquise diamond bridal aet. 14 karet white or yellow gold, from $395. E. Oval-cut diamond solitaire. 14 karat textured yellow gold, from $625, Do Something Buutif\11 .... CM"" Ac~h l••lttlll, Al!!trlll• IJ.,...11 ltlll!AIMf'lctl'll ...... Mt1i.P Cllt,._ ,_ SLAVICK'S J~·ell"rs Slntt 1911 \Vamblugh'1 an apologist ror tough tac. ties they don't Uke. Pt<>ple who prefer t.ougMop lypes ire puzzled that his characte rs dan't alwllys agree with them. • Chew! WHES \\'AMBA UGH finished 1'The Ntw ~nlurlons," he submltltd ii. as a courtt1y, for L011 Angtlts Pol!ce Depart- merrt JCTUtiny. Chit! Edward t-.f. Davis WE · QUOTE PRICES OVER THE PHONE ••• ANYTIME -CHECK THESE SUPl!I SALi SPECIALS-lltff. 11•1• ' Ou! ll•t· l"rlc• 100 Poly-Vi-Sot Child. Vit•min1, ''Cirtu1 Sh 1pt1'' , •. l.tt l.4t Copporlono Sunt1n O il or Lotion, 4 01. , , , , •• , •••. 1.1• 1.5• No1n1m1 A1ro1ol Sh•v1 Cr11m, 11 01. •·••••••••••· 1.19 1.09 O·Tip1, 110·, ..•..•......•..........•••••...... 1.01 .•t I '"' .... 2.79 1.19 .79 .69 2700 E. Coast Hi~hway, at Fernleaf. Corona del Mar • AMPU PAlllNG IN kUI H""-t :JQ. 6:00 Dolly Cl.-4 S...,. .... Hollll9)'1 644-7575 The only credible candidate. • June 6 is our first chance to select the Congressman who will represent our new Forty-second District. Clai r W. Burgener is our finest choice. Clair Burgener is serving his second consecutive term as State Senator, and his fourteenth year of elected public office. They have been hard-working years. And there are more to come. Goals as Congressman Performance as State Senator Sanity in Spending • To protect our vital economic opportunities at a SGllBible level of government spending. He authored Governor Reagan's 1971 Welfare Refonn Act and saved California taxpayers $350 mill Ion every year. His Senate Bill 157 requires We lfare recipients to pick up their checks in person. In New York a similar bill helped stop Welfare cheating. ' Controlling Our Life-style To restrain the uncontrolled growth of cities and safeguard our unique California environment. He prevented off-shore oil drilling along the scenic San Diego coastline. He expanded beautiful Torrey Pines State Park. Safety Under Law Not to settle for half-measures when the safety of family and property are at stake. His 1971 voting record, com piled by the California Peac e Ollicers Association: nine key votes for strong law enforcement, none against. His SCA 13 would allow the Legislature to re-establish the death penalty for capital cl'lmeao if the people of California want iL Better Schools Without Busing To send our children to good schools In the same neighborhoods we chose to live. l His school bill will let local schools use thei r fa cilities more efficiently and save taxpayers $600 million over the next ten years-without busing, Clair W. Burgener deserves the support of every Republican on June 6, and every voter in November. He has earned it. Clair W. Burgener ' United States Congress II FASHION ISLAND ..,.,,.,. .. _,,._cc-•-· NEWPOU BEACH-644.IJIO .._...._.,..._ Op•n Mon. end Frt. I 0 •·"'·to t :lO p.m. :'.!':.. C::.':..-=. ":!":.:'~~~a..~u...._ Jf ·.-~~~~~~,,~~~~~~~~~-.-~ ........ ~~~~~~~1r-~~~~~~~~~.;--~~~~----~~~~,~-,...-~~~~~~~-,,:--::-~~----.. ...;;;..~ - ' OAJl Y PJlOT f Juan Corona--1 Year ·After Yuba City Massacre SPICIAL IDUCAYION SUMMH SCHOOL h1tlllf .... lh... KllMMflt '9f lllti SLOW La.t.•NI•, A•Tlll'IC, •IU· •OLOOICALL'f MANOICA,,aO •1111 OfMl•S wlltrl •"9C .. I IN,.lllf ... 1 ...... By JAi\1ES BAPIS "A reasonable likel~ of Gloria : his brolhe.r. Pedro; audiences in an effort to raise of the First United ~1ethodist the pipe-smokmg dis trict at -residents Sft'm lo ha\·e forgot -PINIST SUMMll SCHOOL YUBA CITY (UPI) -ln a unfairness may 'exist even and his four chlldren -are funds for his defense tn what Church in Yuba City. lorney said. glitnring up at a ten about the rast", it's s\111 c111 .. 1 "' •M ,,.u.i 11111t1 .lllllt IHll .. Jiii, Jllll distant comer of a r.eat!y though the news cover'agt was now actively engaged in his promises to be a long trial. "I guess the only thing I ney,·~paper head hne tacked on c-lrarly on the mind of lht' TU.NS'°IT.t.TION ,IOVIDID trimmed cemetery. aga inst ne ither inflammatory nor pro-defense. "There is a smile on his face hear any nlore is some re.sent-his bulle11n board 11 hich boldly l{f'\'. r . \\' R r n y,· i r \.: . the backdrop of the pie-ductive of overt hostility," the At each of his court ap-now \\'hen he. goes to court," ment that the trial is going to reads ··cor{111a l11•n 1ro Bail" /ii1J pt"r1111rndrnt of !ht> Tw in klNWOOD turesque Sutter Buttes, rest three-member court agreed in pearances now they can be Ha"'k said. de s crib l n g be mo\'ed son1ewhe.re t>lse and II 11 :is 1'rj11 11•h11 played A Citi rs llrscut> ~l 1ss1on on PRIVATE SCHOOL the mortal rema ins or '14 a unanimous opinion last seen holdin~ placards demand-Corona's reAction to the thus cost a lot more money." kry role in llw i;!ate Supren1e :\\ar\"sv1llf''s sktd ro11" \\'h1ch llS S.. W•l4l•t .AHMll• men of the sod, four of them monlh. ing "Justice for Juan V. demonstrati<Hls . he added . "The people ~·ant l'our1 ·s 1nod1flca11on Q( it.o; n1an·y of th<' 'ictinis rr t>-,~~~~~·~·~··~l~ll~•~~~~ known only to God." The order to shift the trial is Corona" and singing in But there is little discussio n justice for Corona but !he~· drc-1sion abolishing t' a p 1 I a I qurnted 1· A year has passed since being appealed by the state at-Spllnish in a plea for his any more among !he residtnt~ v.•onder why it 's taking so Jong punlshn1ent 111 California. The .. , often \1·ond rr '''hal hap·h-----------. their bodies and those of 11 torney general 's office. release on bail. Last month of )'uba City end adjoining to bring 11 to trial." high rourt changf'd its ruh ni.i. pene<t tn Billy \'au~hn ano , other itinerant farm workers After months of passiveness they held a rally on the !11arysville of the crime that G. Dare Teja. the district to allov• judgi•s h1 deny bail to ~lerbrrt Ke nt \\'ho used to ,·i~l! I were unearthed from in which they groped v.·ith Capitol steps in Sacramento, rocked their q u Jet com· attorney ll'ho is Corona .s pros-defendants 11hose c r 1 mt s hrre quilt a hit," th r makeshift graves along the their shock over the enormity denouncing his incarceration. mun ities a year ago . erutor. agrees thtre is httle \1ould pre1'iously ha\'e been snftspoktn m1n 1s1tr t. a 1 cl banks of the of the charges againSt him, In addition, they are travel-"lt's a closed Issue. it's not public talk now about the cast . cons!dtred "capital cases" un · "Tht y d1sapptart<I about !ht meander-Corona's family -his aging ing around Lht &late, ad· talked about any more ," said "Once in a "·hi\e it's brought der ~late statues llnlf• all 1hest: killings hap- THE BEST Rt-11d,.r~hlp pol I 1 prove "rf'anuts" ls on~ of th• \1·orld's mo~t popu\&r comic s trip~. Rf'ad It dall,y ln th• DAILY PILOT. ing Feather -~m~o~the~r.~C~a~nd~id~•:_: ~h~i•~w~d~e::_. _'.dr'.'::••~•~in'!g_~M~ox~i::can-~Am~~er~i::ca~n:__~th~e~R:ev~.~E~d~g~a'.':r~N~'e~ls':o>!ln:_· p~a~s~Jo~r-~up~bu'.'.t~o~n~li>:_· ~in:_a"._!!g~enll<e".r~al~•~·aii!~~·~··_..!_A~llho~u'..!g~h_'.mo~s.:_t :s~ut~te:'.r~Co~u::n~h~· _..!:J>e~nll<e~d~·~· _______ J::=:=:=:=:=:=:=::=:=:=:: River -the victims of mass mur· der. All had betn hacked to death by m.achete- .1uAN CO•ONA type instru- ments. T11r•o to a grave. the 14 v:c- tims in the cemettry hin e been placed end·to-end along a chAin link frnee -as far removed in death from others buried there: as lhey 1vtre from the mainstream while ali 1·e. Nothin_g ha~ yet been done to disturb their ·image as ''nameless, fa celess" men. Four of them re ma i n unidentified and a four -by- three·foot marker be in g prepared for them will so note . Its insc ription will read : "Here lie 14 men of the sod. four of them known only ·10 God .·· Caretakers. openly resentful of ne11•smen. keep busy culling and \\'alerin,g the cemelery lawn but refuse to answer any quest ions about these pauper intermt:nls except to point tov•ard that less cared fo r sec- tion of the cemetery and say: .. They're over there by the ·fence ." Not. far away, in a two- room cell in the outmoded Sut- ter Coun!y jail. Juan V. Corona. the man accused of the murders. spends his time reading. eating heart 11 y, watching telerision. exer::ising a.nd trying his hand at paint· ing . From painling by-the- numbers he has progressed to "dt'C(lupaging." or applying varnish to prints placed on a wooden surface. The latte:r two activities are part of a phy sical therapy pro- gram encouraged by his doc- tor following two apparen t heart attacks Corona suffered last summer after his arrast for the 25 murders. He plead· ed. innocent. The black-haired, taciturn farm labor contractor appears much healthier than a ye&r ago now and has regained nearly all or the 25 pounds he lost dur ing his long illn<:!ss. In fact. he has been placed on a diet. His spirits are described as good Y"hile the 1e11:~\ maneuvering rontinues and his case moves slo\vl y but in- exorably to11r·ard tr ial. ''His sp\rils are good. better than I experted after he 'vas denied bail." Richard Hawk. Corflna's attomey said . ··~ow that we've got one leg on the1n with the change of ,·enue. he figures h\s chances of getting a fair trial are better." Ha"·k was referring to a re- cent order by a ~tale appellate court to move the 38-year-old Mexican-born Corona's trial to an urban community bec_ause of fears he could not rece1\'e a fair trial in rural Sutter Coun· ty. Campsite Threatens Sky View SAN DIEGO IAP I - A giant campground approved for Southern California threatens what may be one of the last best point~ on earth from which to look into space . "This is an awful. terrible traJ[ed\' for science if it goes through," said Dr. Rudolph Lipper!. professor of astronomy emeritus at the University of San Diego. The \igth from 3 . 10 0 campsites to be ac· commodatrd by the Laguna mountain site in central San Diego County would cast a blinding glow into the air. he said . and together with smo~e from fires would destroy the area for astronomy. Lippert and two other s~len· lists complai ned to San Oll~go county superv isors who ap- proved plans for ihe reS?rt last \•:eek . Dr HaltAln Arp of California lnst iiute nf Technology ~id llght pollution is an increasrng problem for astronomeri; at Mt. Palomar north of Laguna mountain. Or Burt Nelson. chairman of astronomy Rt San Diego State College which opened a 11-mill ion observatory on Mt. t.agun.a. pid the camp would ·ruin prospects for a much 'larger obsttvatory. ( , / There's another reason to see the U.S.A. in a Chevrolet other than its comfort, sat features and · traditionally high resale -value. (Prices are lower.*) "AU O'iCff ·~" ... b11td II~ I C<'l'"lr•··'"" of l.A1"uf1ch••er·1 ~JQO~~·!~ ~~11il "rir•• IM 197:J Cl>.,,rOll1111•1or 10 12/11/71 1•·11 W~I' I"• Ml"ul 1ct"'"'"1 SOJQQl l'ld Rtt"l f'Pre~ 1r1 loday Tnt1t l'"Cl t Inclu de 011111 01w •tnoclt Dl•P911 """ tnfr11•. Oe1:1"111on c1•1r11e. 1ute 1no:1 Ioctl !l•tl 111 1do11oon1I . ..... When the government ellmlnaled the Federal Excise Tax on new cars, the price of every new Chevrolet and any extra you might add was reduced. It all happened back in mid-December. The Federal Excise 1'ax was dropped and that _in t~rn dropped th~ pri ~e of every new Chevrolet and every extra from white stnpe t ires to air cond1t1on1ng. So now you can see the U.S.A. at reduced prices. An Impala would be nice. It's the most popular car there i6, you know, because BO much is included in the price. You get power steering, power front disc brakes and Turbo Hydra-matic Chevelle iA the Chevrolet that fit.a more families, more budget.a (eapecially now) and more vacations. Ju8t recently, Chevelle wu honored by the reader! of Car and Dri r,·er mat_azine. They named it "The B .. t Intermediate Sedan of 1972." The redui::ed price 1hown above for the 1i1·cylinder Malibu Sport Coupe ("The Be.st Intermediate.'' that is) includes two popular options: white stripe ilia and wbeel covers. •• • ......... transmission. All standard and all large contributors to Impala's high resale value. You get a double-panel acoustical ceiling to block out wi11d and road noiM, You get solid steel guard beams in the doon and a steel cargo guard that wall• off the passenger compartment from the luggage in the trunk. And included in the reduced price shown above for an Impala Cuatom Coupe, you get all these popular options: a vinyl roof cover, white atripe tires, wheel coven, rear fender skirts and tinted glaM. · Now that's the way to travel. In comfort. In quiet. In a brand-new Chevrolet at a reduced price. It could all be beautiful. The clepend11.hle Nova. ll'fl the Chevr,olcL lhat rl 1.1Ct1n'l ch&.nge much outllide. because most t\ova oy,·ners like it lhe way it is. So we concc ntrale on making what'• inside better and bclter. ·rhe .reduced prii.:e shown a hove for the six-cyl ind ~r No~a ~oupe inc!ude.. th• fo ur options: exterior decor packa11:e , wheel coveni, wh1 te•tr1pe t1re11 &.nd tinted 1lau. You'll fin d Nova a great wa y to see a lot more of the C'.S.A. snd a lot leu o! mechanics and rcpau shops. Chevrolet. Building a better way to see the U.S.A. Chevrolet T~«t I '' l"'u(~ lO ltt "''~'•~,..,Cw '' I"'?•"·~~'" 1' •~kit wt. ·- I ) For The ..... Record Dissolutlo11s Of Marriage 'UH MIY t 1(.-ld ln, Joltn E -ElllU• ltc•M. M1rlon June l fld Ht fllt•I H1>•m•~ IClrDtw .... M1tl~1 E 1n11 J11ymDN1 W. Ell-, ""9"'11 M I ncl Jow D!I (. MIJ"o, Ml rtttllt '"" M1nutl C. Pl•,lt•t. IC1lrlt•n1 •"" K•lnlvn Tt,,l!t, Penn,. I -Cn111 .. H . I ll MOl'IO.lv, Mly 22 lfJ72 'Wrongful Arrest' ' Pawnshop Owµer Sues Four Cities SAJ\7A A!<A -A 1110.000 lawsuit has been flied against the · cities of Costa ?\1esa, Newport Beach, Huntinglon Beach, Laguna Beach and Orange C:Ounty by a C:Osta Mesa pawnshop owner who claims he was wrongfully ar- rested on a charge of receiv- ing stolen property. \Vinston Ve:rdull. 27, owner of Mesa Pa"'·n at 1763 Newport Boulevard, filed the &uit in Orange County Superior Court. ·$1 000 Grant Goes l ' To Medicine Dean A Sl.000 research grant from the Norman R. Anderso n 1-femorial Fund has been awarded to Dr. Stanley ,·an den Noori. associate dean of UCl's Schoo l of Med icine. l""''" JIOtMltl Fot•ll 1fld l.nn (n,.1l<M -----------~ ~"""''"'''" M, Jtttnt rtt M<lh I ncl The suit asks $10,000 for pain, suffering, me n t a I anguish and Joss of business from lhe arrest last Se~ tember. Verdult. tried before Judge: Donald Dungan or the Harbor Judicial District Court, \'.'as found innocent. The grant was given by the California Chapter of the 1-f\•asthoeia G r a vi s Fou n- da.lion. ·which ~stablished the memorial fund Y!'lth con- tri butions gi ven in memory of the late t<.lr. Anderson. who "'as chief copy desk editor of the DAILY PILOT. W•lliitm I( N~IO'\, lont iM E I ncl Onnt ld c. Ht,.!1, M~r1&"• W •nll Htnclc i M. \11rtt11. Gi.ton O•v•\ in.a Ro• -"n" ftr~..,n. (1rnt Ln.,•I"• enn U•I W '-Mt Nullv, P1t"c-a~r~cn, '"" Ot~rl St1.v•rl. Run•ll P•ul t rid 1.111,11 tll11bt1n Htll Wllll1m I{ """ (uolyn Ann Knci. M1r11 '"" Hu•n C R•vnclll•. tn• 0 1nn Jas•Dl'l•ftt J Pat•1, Ot .Inn• Lit t nd Wlll•IM Gror111 S1n11n1, 01c1r J i ncl /l,1(c,n1 J. JD'1n•o.,, l!obtrl A. •nil Ann ll••nn. Ell11bt!n """ t nn 51tpnt n Lt~lf• Stut rt. No•m1 Wvrint And .tltr1d V•ctor V•tnl•. 51nd11 Je1n •~d Oenn•• Roott lllUICO. J11n and /l.~!honv J l.•on. Donn• M. •nd W•ller ~1nW<;r!~ J•ckM>A. Mt •Y v. t nd w111,,,., L. lll1tnlc11k. Eueent Hen•' end J t1n L1111IH Goulfl, f dn• I t nd'H•rv•• ft l raoktr. Jolon W •nd W•l"tlmlnt J, S111<, T1r111 Ml'•• """ l!1cn1•d JDf'fn MM~ro, l.nn1 •nd Jolon /I. M'"''· M1•111r.i /lo. tn<I Tt11•nt W. L•n111ton, Rov P l n<I l'•"t T l1mi.on, S•••h Evt ntellnt t nd Mellon r~•r"' llrtllnv, Onltre1 L. 1nd 5•t!!ht n .I, ft•ull<lk•t. J•m•1 M 1n11 5u• M l.ndtraen, l!ont lO Ltt '"" Vic:!Ml1 lff Hu.,.,. JD1on,re •"" eruct Ftln, Fr1nc11 1'1(1 O••ld H . '!lid Mt• It Flo•e1. Jloblrt t nd Elvt R101 r •.,..obell. Nnrmt •nn R'•~~rl! Pnc• (~n<>••. Dn•ntnv M11g1rtt 1no Robtrt l •l111'd kewbv, I.lie~ Let 1nd 5ntron E1'1tl>tlll "1'der'°", Gt ry 0,1, Sr , •nd 19onnle Jt'" Recycling Buys Tree FULLERTON -With proceeds collected from , a re cyc l ing project, members of Gamma Phi Beta social sorority ha ve purchased a tree for the Cal State Fullerton cam· pus. . Members of the sorority collected $70 worth of papers. cans and bottles with wh.ich to purchase the tree. "We began the project with the hope of collecting trash that can be recycled, lnd with the profit donate ;omething l i v i n g 1n return ." said Miriam Bal, prt!sident of the sorority. The tree is to be olanted next to the Tit a n Bookstore on campus. Verdult said he is also seek ing $100,000 in exemplary and punitive damages for the ar· rest, which he claims was a conspiracy on ~half Of the defendants. ' He was taken into custody Sept. 17 on a complaint issued by the Orange County Distirct Attorney's Office following an investigation by New po r t Beach , Hunllngton Beach and Laguna Be a c h detectives. Costa P.1esa police assisted in the arrest. Jt was alleged that Verdult kno~·ingly bought two stolen bicycles from two Laguna Beach youths. Judge Dungan, however. ruled that no pre>- bable cause existed for the ar· rest and lhat no evidence was presented to pro ve Verdult knew the bikes were stolen. ~ Caught llp Presentation "'as made by his \\'ldO\\'. t<.lrs. Be a Radio personality Mark Dennis demonstrates \vhat he hopes it will be like (\veil , busy at least) July 6, during the annual KEZY /KEZR·FM Cystic Fibrosis auc· tion. Volunteer phone operators from Voit Rubber Company will accept calls beginning at 6 p.m, to .sell more than 350 donated items. Anderson. "·oman's ed itor of the DAILY PILOT. During t he ceremonies, Harold Rosenberg. foUndation director. said that "lt is in· deed a great pleasure to dis· RESEARCH GRANT Stanley vin de Noort search." Cystic Fibrosis Auction Set Dr. van den Noort , who also cause and better aiding treat· is secretary of the !\IG menL Medical Advisory Board. said Contribut ions may be mailed that it is because of the to the foundaion , 237 !!:. medical knov.'Jedge g a in e d Catalina SI., Los Angeles, A one<arat diamononairc ring, a junior golf packet. a king size waterbed and a real. live quarter horse are a few of the hundreds of item s to be auctioned June J to raise fund$ for the National Cystic Fibrosis Research Foundation, Orange County Chapter. 6 p.m. and continue all night local program ot total patient from research that the fatal ily ;:~C~a:;:lif~. :::9000~4~·======. on Saturday. care, including a cystic rate of th i s rare Bidders will be asked to call fibrosis clinic at the .Orange neuromuscular disorder i s the station direct--638--0587 or being reversed. E a r I y 77'1984 All 1h d. 1 1· · County Childrens Hospital in l>" • e ra 10 s a ions diagn os is and treatment are personnel "'ill act as auc· Orange, a no-<:os;.summer key fa ctors. , tioneers and le I e P hon e camp for children with lung However. he pointed out. the operators from Voit Rubber damaging diseases. and con· cause and cure still are Company in north Costa Mesa tributes to basic research to unknO\\'f!, KIDS LOVE UNCLE LEN SATURDAYS IN THE DAILY PILOT have volunteered lo answer discover a control or cure for Dr. van den Noort is direc· the phones. . ~t~h~e~d~i~"~'~"'~· --------l~i~ng~h~is~r~e~se~a~r:ch~a~t ~fi~nd~i~ng~lh~e~=========== Merchants are asked to call 1~ l'lld P'flll!ttl Advlf1iN!l'l•nt the chapter office, 635-0900. t1~~r•r, Sto••n ,0 •n<I Wlfll•.., H L-----------' Mf'Odv, J t•u 511t1~en •rid Ptt,lclt Verdult says he has never knowingly purchased stole.n bicycles. The auction itself "'ill be unique-conducted entirely by radio and telephone. Orange Count y Station KEZY is aiding the Cystic Fibrosis group in the event, \\'hich will begin at The county chapter of the national foundation supports a I""" 1"•1~•w• ll1rry, ti ""• Mt rle •~II Jo,te>ll (h1rlet f'•••IWO"~. Jn•n I ""d JI'''"' E. G ll!sOt>, l91rbt•1 Jten •nd Wllf;•m L1r- " Ct11mole•. Herm1n M "nd Ptme11 J, \/llrln~I. F,.d H•rrh •nd l.lll!'ln S!Oed Tllom,.1. Flore"'' A. t nd JMtPll G. Downln1. C¥l•rl11 C. •~d Ellt P111lin~ I.. Cvdno:1n1k S •ild ~obtrie S. Fev1rt\lt . Do•oth• M tnd Arm1nd E. /'"'on. E!!"'I" B ln<I ll•t!V I. O'bornt. Morrll L. tnd M•r• F•t nt ll 19•rr•, ll~rD1r1 I{ •nl! R•Y""~n~ II. ~!•nlty, W•Ynt Artnur •nd Lindi• +<<Jd•nn. Julll .l>nne Ind C.e,•111 G. H11vt11d<. Oou1111 M. tnd Cc!lffn L. r:1~~•nn, Su••n A """ P•• ! O ft~lo<ih, Jo~erh ,. e nd J •nlu o .1n1 E:~ •. Gwendo'•n JI~• t nd Jc11oh "'"rvln P.'-"'"• loll~ Ol•Oll end Sy!v!t Ell tnl F'1•9, Vlc•I l •Ml ICtl\v 8. H•'•IMI. IC••hrvn ( tr>!!'"""" J l1~1wtJI. M1rv1en l t nd l!ov V. S•lt v, (""~'• t nd Dt vld E . 11 1 Martin, Tr111 l.nn t nd Jtm11 Enwt•d Cort, Shtlvev Realn1 J 1nd Robtrl I . o"~'''· LI""' Lt• end 01nnl1 L" M•orudtr. M1•lo"' Allc1 1 n d Ooneld Oilwarlll Towler, Jl o•1nn1 G. tnd Jim T!lnm11 CD!'l1. Jn•""'lnt tnd R091r 5111<"<111 Mcl.fff, Wl!fltm H. tnd Mtrttrl! M1y Durhtl'I', Jl>O F. Ind l lndt (, M1r1htll, lrt nl T. •M Ncrrl1 A , Ill Ta<lt•o. Mocn •• 1 M. '"" El!Hn M. 1-.,. Clltrln w. t nd l"l ffttlt A"" (ttll, Oclnr•• S. ~~d JMn O. N1tltnd, Rlct11•d I(, 1nd M1r11r1t M. F lied Mly 11 llarnen. Ann F. I nd Clifford J. Wd!ordl"ll, Jo-E 11lflil end 01rv \.11 F unle,11~. (nr•llo F. •n~ S•bln• G Noblt!!, Chester W, "nd ll1nche R. I •.,.,~~•. ~h••nn l """ "''"'"I J, ~•rl, Chrbtlne O '"" R&blr! C. LJ1t11ll1ld. Mervin M, Jr, •M Norr111 J. ~·lt>m. Llnll1 •nn 1nd S!t~en 011n , MICklY, J1n1, GArnl1r •nd Glry W•n~~ll Mu•r1v. OcrnlhY M1c~1nrl1 1...:I Jolon M•r!ln Fr•c•lo1v. Glorlt J11n ind Jl>M~ F•~ n, Lind• Pe•""" Ktnn,•h ElwO'V! Caley. Leontrd Eugtnt Jr. •...:I Judith ' Del~tdlllo, 0 11ht lot '"" M1rllft T. Sllvt, (1rm•n t l'ld Jot ~ Death Not.ices O!RIHt;TOH J~ln E:. O.Orlno1on llJS lrvlnt .lvt . Co•t1 M••I 0 •!t o! d•lth, M•Y 70, !97' ~~~~Iv~"~:'. ~~,,~~~:;.1~· v~u.~~·I~~~~ O•r•n1Tl)l'I. Venlc11 d•u~Mtr. Mrs C•rol A nd t •f ~n . Su nnv..,11d1 1 nl n e t ••ndchlldr!ll'I •"d !hr!'O ; r • 1 t • P'•ndch•ldren. Prlvo!o 1orvlc1' wero htM toCIY, MnndfY, 1 P M, W11 tc!lll C"h•oel Vlo~!clitt (htot! Mort~1ry, 646-•Bll. b lr1ctor1. WIRTZ Mell• M w .. 11 .tgt !-0, 111 1Jt Albtrt Plat •. (osl" Mo'• 0 11• cl d•Uh. Mlv 11, tfll ~ur•,.fd bv h111b1nd, J"c•; •Oil. ::~l~~te•~~n~J •• e~11111:t~tt1,N~1111~lr~I~~;: Ntn<v Loc.01e11r. Nor!~ C11rolln•. 011renr,, Mr. 11nd N"'' J W Jon~,. !our brnlh,,. 11'11 11• 111!~''' •II o! North C1110Un1: no~ ir~~d~~11f '\~011J:~•'<'(~.Jr.-1!7lti J,!'. J tmts "ltrtev 0Ti1cf1!1nf lnt1rmen1, J ones (...,t!tr~ '~ Rowlt nd, Na C1rol!n1. Bell !•otdw•v Mortw1rv, OirtC!llfl. ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCLIFF MORTUARY U1 E. 17th St., Costa J\lesa 646-4W • BALTZ BERGERON FUNERAL HOME Corona del J\1ar 673·9450 Costa J\1esa 646-%4%4 BELL s i!oADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway. Cosla J\1esa LI 8-3133 • McCO~flCK LAGUNA BEACH 11IORTVARV 1795 Laguna Canyon Rd. 194 -Mll PACIF~ VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery Mortuary Chapel 3500 Pacific View Drl\'I Newport Btacb, Callforllla 144-%700 PEEK ,MllLY COLONIAL FUNERAL HO!IE ':'IOI Bol1a Aw. We1tmJn1ter lf3..3JU SMITHS' afoRTUARY m !laiJI St. e .. dll(too -- • Snakes Appear Early--Be Prepared Ralllesnakes are appearing unseasonably early this year in Orange County, according to Dr. John R. Philp, Orange Counly Health Officer. If you observe any snake on or about your premises. phone Orange County Animal Control at f>.12. 7301 or your local police department and re q u est assistance. Do nol handle or attempt to capture a snake. Keep in mind that all rattle:snakes do not have rattles to identify them. A rattlesnack may not have shed its skin or an older rat· llesoake may have Jost its rat· ties for one reason or another. Remember that all snakes should be considered poisonous until identified otherwise by an expert. "NI' Sin usno ,.,,. .... ,. ,,._,. r,._" '1'-" ..... .,, ,. llt M. r._ T• .................. -. --ow.--..· ...... WMl'RW.llUO..f .. M-,_,... If you are bitten by a snake, do the following : remain calm and quiet. phone your fire, police. or .sheriff's department for help. If possible. have someone kill the snake so it may be identified. Do not cut yourself in an attempt to bleed out or suck out venom -the cutting mighl prove more dangerous than the snake bite. Instead , b e g i n emergency treatment: e Immediately immobilize the affected extremity. Keep the victim quiet and allow absolutely no movement in the alfected arm or leg. e A pp I y a tourniquet directly above the affected site. Release the tourniquet for 90 seconds every 10 minutes. A tourniquet should - not be applied to a finger. but instead should include the en- tire hand. Remember, medica l help is as close as your tel ephone. Preventive efforts should be directed toward vulnerable areas. like arms and legs for example: e Have 1111 extrrmities covered with loose clothing when walking in wild areas. e Always have another person with you when walking or hiking in known snake country. And if you are bitten. begin t h e aforementioned emergency treatment and send the person for help, e Wear high-topped shoes or hiking boots when walking in known snake country. Jf you are in known snake country. here are some don'ts: e Don 't walk close to rocky ledges or bush piles where unseen snakes may be hiding. e Don 't turn debris or other objects away from you "'hen looking beneath them. Inst ead. turn them toward you. fn th is way. you can shield yo urself from the bite of any rattlesnake I y Ing underneath. e Don't place your hands gloved or.. ungloved, under boards, in wood piles or in places where a snake could be hiding. e Don't handle recently killed rattlesnakes. Always use a slick or other device to move them. By renex action they m~y still inflict dangerous bites. General Tire Pre-Memorial Day I rice ae! . Charge it ~ at General Tire t * 2..;drfRELHALFPRlce" ~ ·• When You Buy The First Tire At OUr Reg. Low· Price General Jet-Air"fil WHITEWALLS AND BU.CKWALLS rn• COMPACT CARS INTfRMEl>IATE CA RS ... TUl(lltl IU.CtlW f\llflflS wtllTl.WJIU RO. D. fl""!•.;.· .... ,....."°"'~"". --l.U 1,1T.,. -T"9 111TI,. _,,,_ .... TIN llt.H lt.15 tti.n 11.n llf-11 11 Oii UWTED~Yt SAVE '4650to'79 -.I'\. Y NYlON COJm 800'1' .,.. -.,.. "°' .,_. .. , .. 11 1 SAL.E PAICESON SIZES TO o-.!JtT~AM ••-AY 1t1oaw. -.~ FIT90UTOF101MPORTCARS • , .,.~ •M'l'OllOOllOIDO+ PYitH M lftOwft At GMtenl Ti,. SlorM. CoM9t!ltM!ly prlctcl·•t'ind•p.Ment OMlert dllf)l"""9'"' ~ ~ DON SWEDLUND I COAST G·ENERAL TIRE You and your car .... ~/ You 11111 not Jovo 1111 much as 1ou uoed to, but 119 you ructy lo junk H? The old love affair with the automobile has cooled off a bit, becausa everybody now realizes that most of our smog problem comes right out of our cars' exhausts. What's being done about the problem? Plenty. The State of California requires that cars be equipped with smog controJ devices now. A new Federal law requires that auto manufac· turers-by 1975 and 1976-must equip all new cars with super devices that reduce pollutants by 90 per cent from present levels. Lead Is 'being phased out of gasoline-not because it contributes to smog (it doeSn't)-but because the smog control devices won't work with leaded gas • These tough measures wnl have a real impact on the smog problem In the years immediately ahead-and that 's welcome news for every Californian. BUT-does this mean you should junk your present car? Or be unable to run it without damage to your motor? Proposition No. 9 on the June ballot asks you to do just that. Not content with what the State and Federal governments are doing about auto-caused smog, the sponsors of Propasition No. 9 want to do more. Their Idea of more Is to phase lead out of gasoline completely at the time new cars equ ipped wi th the super smog devices are on the market. Proposed Federal regulations allow a small amount of lead contsnt to take care of the needs of older cars. But under Proposition No. 9 1 If you can't afford to buy a brand new car, you've had ii! Not only 1hat, but Proposition No. 9 also pl aces limits on alher Ingredients Jn gasoline. The Technical Advisory Committee of the State Air Resources Board states that the "combination of these separate requirements Is questionable on a tech inc al basis" and that "It ls doubt· ful whether all manufacturers can meet these requirements." That means tflat even If "legal" gasoline would operate your ear without damaging It, It would be In short supply and very likely rationed, And all !or no purpose! Proposlllon No. 9 contains another little "goodle", too. If, even without your knowledge, ttle smog control device on your car Isn't wort<lng properly, you would be fined .1 % of your annual gros. Income every dey until It w&1 fixed! Let'• attack the amog problem Intelligently. The Proposition No 9 way Is Just plain absurd-end would cause severe economic proble~s for middle and low-Income Cllllornlans. Vote NO on Proposition No. 9 CIUFGRNIAa AlllNST THE POLUmOl llRIATIVE 870 Marice! Street, San Francisco, CA 94102 1127 Wllahlre Boult1Vard, Los Angeles, CA 90017 MYRON W. OOORNBOS, PrNldont, Southorn Councff of Con,.rmton Ctubo • Co-Chefrmtn • 585 _West 19tll, Costa Mesa Pllone 540-5710 or 646-5033 I ---fhe•-drillertiref""P"10" ' , --'l--.---::-------:~.----- -" • f'n1nlly Circus by BU Kea11e ., '<) . ,,. ~ . " -... ..... I H C-:7:"> Trouble Follows l(ent Survivo1~ By HUB ERT MIZELL MIAMI, Fla. (AP) -~1ary Vecchio ~·as ah\•ays big for her age. A runaway at 14, !he dark-haired girl fro1n the J.1 iami suburb of Opa Lock.'.l easily passed .'.IS ;111 18-year- old. "School \\•as a\.\•ful and I 1\•;1s fed up.· I ·decided lo run. I ~ot to Atlanta nnd !hen hitchhiked north ... not carlng where I ended up. Somrhody gave me a ride to Ohio." · That was 197tl. ·A few ·days pings from her daughter's pas! two years. Dozens of letters are there, much of it hate mail to the girl who became a symbol of the radical move- ment. ·· 1 ·1n still on probation as a runaway. It runs out Aug. Zl and 1naybe I'll go away again. I'm not happy. I don't like Up<t Locka any more. People have been nasty to me here," Mary says. Mary had a few good friends before her famous runa~ay. 'Jtlaybe I 'll !/O cuvay again. 1'11• not happ!J I do11't like Opa Locka """ 111ore. People l1a ve bee11 nasl!f to rue laere.' after reaching Ohio. she found herself marching 1\•ith nc>w- found pals in a n ti w 1 r demonstrations at Kent Stale University. The tense scene erupted into a campus fi ght b c t ween demonstrators and the Na- tional Guard. Shots rang out and victims began falling. One was Jeffrey Glenn J\1iller, a boy ~lary had just met. ''Nobody would help hi1n;" !he recalled. "He \.\'as lying there. bleeding. I screarncd. It wa s horrible. I began crying because I knev.• he w~s dead ." A photographer captured i1iss \'ecchi's 1nomcnt of grief in a picture that \.\'O n the Pulitzer Pr ize. Mary Vecchio is now 16, still large for her years. and back at home in Opa Locka wit h her parents. a married sister, a 4-year-old sister and a friend, who has run away from home. Mary tried school ror a while but quit in the 10th grade. A cardboard box in Claire Vecchio's bedroom holds clip- But "their parents don't let them hang around n1e. ~1ost of them say I'm a Communist and a bad girl. So "·hat, I don't need 'em." The mail keeps coming dai- ly, both pro and con. The latest letters are from South America. The hate mail bugs her. but not as it did in 19~·0 \.\'hen she would b e co m c frightened and cry. "Some letters are nice,'' sai d Mary. brushin~ dirt off her jeans and pushing back her long hair. "Many o[ th em offered me a new home. Some \.\'ere psychiatrists. I thought about taking some of them. But I'm still here." "\Ve're convinced she got in- human treatment at Junior high school ." said Mrs. Vec- chio. "Tha t made her run away. She got into fights, but it "'as usually the other girl's fault.'' Opa Locka has a 10:30 p.m. curfew for teenhgcrs. and J\1ary has been picked up four times for violations. She \\':JS accused of s ni ffi n g transmission oil , but her mother says "she was framed by the ix:iUce." The Dade County Juvenile Court sent Mary home after the runaway to Ohio, but sentenced her to six-n1onths in a youth home for another runaway a few months later. "I was all of four miles away, but they had me marked by then. I \Vas sent lo the youth home and it was awful." She later "broke out" but was picked up again and c;ent back to serve out her term. Mary got into another fi ght, but claims the other girl started it because "I ac. cidentally stole one of her French fries. u As for the future? "I don't know what will hap. pen, but it can't be much worse than the past." said her mother. I See by Today's Want Ads e SENOR. you will love this 'GS Bullaco. It's El Ban- dito 300, in excellent con- dition with a new motor. e A DREAM FOR SALE' This traYC"I trailer Is a '68 Shasta. It's a aeU-con- talned 13 footor with water. lights and toilet. e Rf. A GOOD SPORT in this ~· Diesel Sportfishcr. It hM 11 custom '71 IAthn FIG. Slip Is availabl~. • -... - DAIL y PILOT 11_ HURRY! SALE PRICES HONORED TUES. & WED. ONLY! Big 24 Inch . BAR-B•Q GRILL SPECIAL PURCHACE • Rustproof chromeM plated grid. • Grill adjusts to 4 heights-cool hard- wood handle. • Third leg detaches & all legs fold under bowl for easy storage. • 5'' easy-roll wheels . REG. $8.49 • Flat wall paneling is just great for homes, vans, campers. • 2 beautiful wood tones: Pagoda Teak or Pagoda Pecan. Made To Sell For $6.951 s~~:.:~, $195 STRUCTO FIRST COME- FIRSJ SERVED I DON'T MISS OUT ON THtSI 45" Diameter SPLASH POOL Briggs & Stratton 2 H p .: POWER EDGER "Kiddies' Pool for Lois of Summer fun!" Makes Everylhlng Neat In a H • Bright yellow pool with colorful daisy flower pattern. •Tough, seamless polyethylene construction guarantees easy cleaning & durability. • E ·1 urry/'' as1 y converts to a trimm •2h ~ .p., 4 cycle Sri & . with recoil starter ~g~~ s;~on engine •Heavy dut . e eels. COLECO "'" '. ,, ' . - Big 12 Ft. x 12 Ft. DINING CANOPY ''Sets Up Jn Mlnutesl'' • The best friend you have on a hot summer day. •Made of tear-proof, hose washable miracle fabric. • Includes a ll poles, ropes, sl ides & stakes. REG. $17.95 $14 95 PICK ONE UP FOR THE MEMORIAL DAY WEEKEND • Stays brighf- a real favorite with the kids. • y yet l1gh enough to h di . n e easily. REG. $59.99 WOW/ SAVE $12.00/ $47 99 TUES. & WED. ONL Yt TUES. & WED. ONLYI Recessed Bathroom MEDICINE CABINET ''Time Fo Dreu Up Your latbrooml'' • One piece, seamless medicine cabinet with 3 adjustable shelves. 'f;;;;;;;;;;;;p;;;::::"'-l • 16".x26" copper-bock-I 1 ed mirror framed in 1tainle11 steel, REG. $10.99 SAVE $3.001 TUES. & WED. ONL YI 16 Inch Wide .. ·.·' .. -;:· .,,,.,,,,- DELUXE HAND MOWER • 5 Sheffield steel culling blades wh iz merrily through the gross. • 8" solid rubber tires for easy handli ng. • Ad justable cutting height, REG. $18.95 SAVE $4.001 $1495 TUES. & WID. ONLY I • ..,/.J Professionol D-23 HAND SAW ''Dlufo,,__Tlte fln•st Madel'' • Highest quality chrome-nickle alloy steel, • Full taper ground, bevel filed, hardened, tempered & polished-hardwood handle. REG. $10.99 SAVE $4.001 $699~,."" TUES. & WED. ONLYt I ,I 5 Webbed SAND CHAIR • Sturdy, tubular olminum frame with strong, colorful poly webbing. • Just the th ing for beach or patio-- take It with you-- il's lig htweight. REG. $4.29 TUES. & WED. ONLY ! J 2 DAILY PILOT • ' l • . . . . .. . ' ~. May 22, 1'1\ (again) . ' list all you towin in Bingo CashGameisa7 II. can still win thirteen other ways. Shell wants more winners! This week on ly (obviously, this is a special offer). your Shell dealer has a special deal. Very special. In addition to the thirteen regular ways of winning : five rows across, five rows down, two diagon als and four corners, now we have a new special way of winning. If, when you scratch off five numbers on a Bingo Card, you uncover both a 7 and 11 ••• you'll win a dollar. Only two numbers (7and11) make you a winner. Pretty good! And if you win more than one way with one card, we will pay both ways. ~something else you'l lilce. If you\'e been.saving Shell Bingo Cards-this offer applies to any and all cards you now possess ••• and all the cards you get this week. However. the special 7 and 11 offer must be redeemed no later than May 31, 1972. (Which means cash in your 7 and 11 winners quick.) By the way , you r chances of winning on anyone card (on 7and11) are at least 1 in 27. With those estimated odds. it's sure worth a try. Come on in and Play Bingo For Cash. You don't have to buy anything . Just stop by a participating Shell station. Licensed drivers only. Void where prohibited by law. , , 21 14 18 20 24 ' 3 8 9 4 ~ - 16 13 5 22 10 12 2 FREE 25 11 15 6 7 17 19 _.,.. ... _ .... -....,11......., ..., 21, 1172. ........ Oii .. '°"" ' nd••IMMl ...... ..,J1,1171 Pick up a Bingo Card from 1 pirtlelpatlng Shell dearer today or send • sett-addressed envelope to Oepar1ment BFC 11. P.O. Box 279,Clllcago. llllnola 60648. • • . . --. Getting Better Is Contagious By JO OLSON Of Tbt D•lly 'Utt Slltf When all the members of the Three Cs Club get together for a meeting, wllich they do every Wednesday morning, there's a lot or hustle and bustle and laughter. It's hard for an onlooker to realize that J7 to 20 oc the group are stroke victims and the club was crganized for their rehabilitation. It really didn 't start as a club but was an outgrowth of the classes at Hoag ?rfemorial H o s p i t a J , Presbyterian \\' h e re volunteers were trained to help stroke patients on the road to recovery. The patients and volunteers reeently named the group the Cheer Up, Communicate and Com~ munity Service Club, nicely pin- pointing its th ree objectives. lt's difficult to tell which members are patients and. which are volunteers, and according to Emily Hackler, volunteer strMe., program director for the reder-aUy funded Region al Medical Program. that's one of the tragedies of stroke. PATIENCE CRUCIA~ People from all \\'alks 'of life are victims, and the stJ:'(lke patient may get little understanding because be .appears normal. Friends and relatives may ctiide hfm· for not being able to do" and remember lit. tie things, forgetting that these will have to be re-learned, and that pa· t ience and understanding from those about him are crucial to his recovery. "A stroke patient's whole life is In shock," Miss Jlackler said. "He has to find new interests and a lit· tie. quality to life." A stroke pa tient ma y lose his ability to read, write, speak, add or subtract, jn addHion to being paralyzed, she added. What the club offers is a chance for stroke victims to get out of the house and into the company of peo- ple with similar problems and peo- ple who have the time to talk and listen to them. They may play poker, chess, Yahtzee, bingo or pool, sit and talk or work on handcrafts. A pot of cof· fee is always going and there are cookies and juice. FIELD TRIPS Voluntttrs plan to take the club mem bers on field trips once a month, have speakers and get the group out.s ide for physical activity on warm summer days. The club is open to anyone who has had a .stroke, and there are no dues or initiation fees. Tran.sporta· tion lnay be arranged for those without it. Some couples have found fr iends through the club, such as Alan and Dorothy Grisly of Costa Mesa . who invited another couple to travel to Yosemite with them. Tragedy also pops up for some tlub members as it did for three men whose wives divorced them after their strokes . One of the men remarried, Miss Hackler said . Club members also celebrate Mrs . Herb ert Miller, Tuesday Cl ub, sha res we avi ng less on with Irv Neft and Cla ra Foos one Wednesday. their victories and reC(!ntly ap- plauded for one man who was pennitted by the state to come back to work for the three weeks he needed to be eligible for retire- men t. He and his wife had been bo rrowing on their ca r to make ends meet . VARIED INTERESTS !\1any of the patients were under retirement age when they ·were stricken, and the Three Cs club in· eludes an accountant, chemical analyst, boat broker. artist, secretary and housewife with children still at home. The opportunity to socialize has m e a n I so much to the patients t h a t they have ~e-­ cided to welcome people \Vllh other kind s o! handicaps, said Mr s. Olive Gruber, chairman . As a birthday ca ke wa s cut dur· ing a recent meeting, cookies made by a patient were passed around and the poker players were ill9 terrupted for an announcement , one of Mrs. Gruber's comments seemed just right: "There 's something about this club that is contagious." (}ameJ help 6f1·ot~ 11iclim6 lo recover, BEA ANDERSON, Edi tor MOnd•~. M•~ u. nn P••• .. • GEORGE BARNETT, HANNALEE. GOODWI N, WARREN WADDELL GO PICNICKING Evidence Won't Support His .Theory DEAR ANN LA NDERS: As a prac· ticing radiologist I take exception to y<lur statement {which also is the position of some physicians) that proper support for the breasts (a good brassiere) will ntinirniz.e sagging. During the past 40 years most American women (starting ~bout age 13) have worn brassieres al t tht en· tire thne they ere in an uprig · ~n. Some women even sleep in brassieres.' This practice stems rrom the bcli(!f that the female figure iS, more attractive if the bosom is elevated, pointed outward, separated, and so on. It bolls down to a matter of appearance rather than health. I personally prefer the natural, unsupported look to the elev11ted1 fixed look that resembles and feels like a departmtnt st.ore mannequin. Physician.! know that body tissue tend! lo atrophy and lo!e llrength wh<n !tip· poiUd and lmmob111%cd. It may be that the lmmobilizatlon of the breast. and the prasure from a brassiere can reduce blood aupply, tend to ceuse atrophy ~nd create more thari ordinary sagging. Scientific evidenct actually favors no bra. To learn defin itely whether brassieres reduce or increase sagging would require controlled studies. One woo!d need to get volunteers who would be willing to wear a bra on one breast only for a period of several years. Any suggestions? -TEX· AS M.D. DEAR M.D.: Sincere and dedicated peo~e have done many tbJngs In the In- terest of 11clentlflc research but I 11uspert you'd have a tough tlme rterulllng volunteers for THIS PROJF.cT. U you 1ucceed1 please let me know. DEAR ANN: My husband and I live in a nice apartment. A newlywed couple moved in Boros8 tht hall . I invited the young woman in for coffee the second morning. She has been here every day since, for at least three hours. Now it has gotten to the point where she expects me to be her marriage counselor. Whenever she and her hus band ha ve a fight she wants me to tell her '"hat to do . 1 am sick of it. t have tried everything from remo vinir the welcome mat outside our door to buying a plaque !or the tuchen which - ?4•.t~ •• reads, "Love your neighbor but don't wear out you r welcome." She doesn't get the idea. Don't suggest that I come right ool and ten her to cool it. She 's a nice person and l don 't v.'ant to hurt her feelings. llelp me. pr ..... -DESPERATE IN GRAND RA PIDS DEAR 0. TN G.R.: I am continually bemuRd by the thou1and1 of Pffple who think they have •• obll~aUon to hold open-house for anybody who b111 spare time and koow1· how to lean on a door hell. The beat way to prevent 1 nelahbor from becoming a dropptr·lnner Is by dropping out yourttlr. The first time .omtone dr9pt In, let htr know yo11 ire busy or on you.r way out-1Dd ask her to P'eate call Ont nelt time. A1 for tllle t1l1U111 barnacle. If rou do1't waM to ltU her Dak>ut thal sbt ha1 ' ,. -, made a pest or lltrself, don't aawtlrl6e doorbell. tA one-way 1ee.t k r 0 •1 ~ petpbole costs seve n doUan.) DEAR ANN LANDERS : My nert<loor neighbor disci plines her young chlldrea by grabblntflhem by the hair and pulltn1 until th<y prom~e to behave. Won't w. result In bald ness? -UPSET DEAR UPSET: Probably not, bat H migbt result lo something wone -1uclt a~ hosllle kids who. when they grn" lllP- wlll want lo pull somHnt eJse't b1lr It make them "behave." 'Are your parents too strict? llard to reach? Ann Landers' booklet~ "Buegttt by Parents? llow lo Get ~fort freedOm ,. coul(I help )'OU bridge the generaUon aaP.. Send 50 cents in coin with your request and a long, sta mped , .. a-acldreaed envelope to the DAILY PILOT. I • ' • ('. 1 f 4 OAJLY PILOT Your Horoscope: Sagittarius: Look Out For Eccentric Friends TUESDAY MAY 23 By SVIJNV.Y OMAltlt Scorpio ls n1 yst r rlnu 5, persli;tent, ff1 ... r1natcd with the OC"tult and pas.~1nnate. ,.111ny Scorpio wt>nlf'n. lhese days, arP show1nR 11r1 unu~u11 I interest 111 a!-lrulO!o()', 1n<;lud1ng Princes!! (;r111·t• uf ~111n:tl'o. Scorpio r:in n1an 11lt1l:-i1e monr y And peoplr Scorpio ctin be JCRlnus, hut loyal Sr<>rp10 r('ln h111i lc aJ.:a111~t odrl~ and llU\'· l'crd Srorptn ha1·rnoni~r ~ Yt Jth C'<inl"rr. Pisl'c.~. V1ri,:H and C11prirorn. S1·orpio _,houlri rx· errlse caution 1n dr;i1 with Tauru.~. AQuariu~ and Leo Afilt:S jf!.11tr1·)1 21 April 19 J: Direct course may not work - hf awHrr of twi.~1., and !urns. Puhl ici ly a«en111p11nit'!f efforts. Sorial life will be flt'Cf•lr.rated. ~111rri11gr. p11rlnl"rship J s ,;po1lii;hlcd. Nothing is 11pt lo rrmain the sn1nf'. Tr\UltUS 1/\J)rl] 20.Mar 20 1: Plenty of mo v e me n t lri- dicated: you may find it dif· ficull to Rctually locate goal. Key is lo bf!! observant. Cht>Ck apparenl minor d e t B I I s . Surpriae orftr is Indicated. Rt1Ilze you won't be 11ett\ng aometh lng for nothing. Gl-.;1\11~1 1M11y 21 .. Junt 211 1: Guard posses.,ions. Obtain hint from ·rauru1 me~sagt. Affair• nf htllrt d-0rnlnale. Men1ber of nppo.<i1le sex plays fta!urtd role . Nothing oow Is apt 1'J be lukewArm. ft Is a!l or tloth 1ng. Be re-lidy for t.1cltemc n1. CANCt;lt (June 21·July 22 1: Action nccurs in dome11t1c area . You break through reslrit'lJ11ns. Some fa m i I y members may feel 1Jighted. l\rv 1s to he la ir but firm . f\h;nry question can be .~ellled. Y11 u di!<il from po,,1t1on or slrenJ.(th. Lt:o I.July 2.1·Aug. 22 1: \\'hat was held in abeyance "i;:rl'I moving." Sen.!lilive but· tons are pushed, projecl.!l are artivated. Be sure you are <.'flrrectly quoted. Refuse to let other!! lake you for granted. State views; o u 111 n e ob- jeC'tive.~. VIH GO <Aug. 2.1·Sept. 22): Monry posltion fluctuates. Ag· tiressive friend, associate may ~ overanxious. Study track re<'Ofds. Mearui rely on those with proved pa1t performan<.'e!. C • pr I c or n person plays prom inent role. l,IBRA IS.pt. 2.1-0ct. 22 )' Finish what you 1tart. Spre1d .1J~P~t~~ ~~"~ To avoid disappolntrnent, prospective brides are reminded to have their wedding stories with black and white ~lossy P.hoto-~raphs to the DAILY PILOT Womens o .. partment one week before the wedding . Pictures received after that time will not be used. !<'or engagement announcements It t.s Imperative that the ttory, also accompanied by a bl~ck and white glossy picture, be s~b­ ntitted six weeks or more before the wedding dote. II deadline ls not met, only a story will be U5ed. To help !UI requirement• on both wed· din~ and engagement stories, forms are available In all of the DAILY PILOT offices. Further quesUons will be answered b'l. Women's Section slaff members at 642-432 . GLAMA CREPE PRINTS mes.sage . Write, advertiie and publicize. Wh11t you ov.·n goes up In valur, includ lnp; prop- erly. Someone ill trying to make roorn for you at top or l11dder. llelp by giving yourself 11 push. SCOJlPJO (Ocl. 23·Nov. 21 ): Some travel plans are subject to change. Your \ong·range goals require review . New start is in picture. Orie born under Leo figure! prom- inently. Previously restricted areas \.\'ill be opened to you. SAG lliAHIUS (Nov. 22· Dec. 21 l: f'riends respond Jn eccentric nl<!nner. Persons who ordinarily are sen.sible may now be erralic. Maintain your own emotional balance. Don 't glvt Jn to mood9, self·pl· ty. Burden is S()()n due to be lllitd. CAPRICORN /Dec. 22-.Jan. 19J: Male, partner may be in mood to argue. Ride with storm. Don 't compou nd error. Display sense of humor. You receive uriusual proposal. Jt'.!I not necessary to ju mp at first offer. Let others know you have self-esteem. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20.Feb. J8 J: Don't force, push or ca· jole: You get your way through easy.going attitude. Xnow ll and act accordingly. Leo is in picture and so i.!l another Aquarlan. Tr.Jve\ and vacation plans may be "up in air." PISCES (Feb. l9·Mar. 201: r r i ends are on collision course. Your best tack now is to exchange ideas. Don't be too sel in opi nion!'!. Make in- tell igent concessions. Gemini and Virgo person!'! are in- volved. Special mess11ge is received . IF TODr\ Y IS Y O UR BIRTHDAY you are dynamic. possessed of a great curiosity -and ability to express yourself. You are a traveler and a reporter -you paint your own pictures and appreciate the portrait.. other.!l <.'reate. June should be your most signifi- cant montb in 1972. To find out """°'' lvck't' f11r 't'&u In moro1¥ 1nd !ol/1, erd~r $¥0nt 't' Om1•r"1 boolii11, Mhcr1f Hinh /or .'otln 11'd Wom1n." Slnd blr!lldllf 1nd 7! ct nh lo °'111fr A1!rOlo•~ !tKr111, '"-l)AIL y PILOl, lo~ )2..0, Grind C1"!r11 511· Uon, New York, N.Y. 10017. • ' , • -t t " Diamonds Are a Man's Most Valuable Friend · By LEROY pOPE NE W YORK JUPll -Only r few years ago it would hive been unthinkable that 1 man would pay $20.000 for a matching wrist\.l'illch, cuff· ~ links, tie clasp and ring to 1 adorn his own person. You Yt'Ould have had to go back to the Renaissance to find l!IUCh ostentation In the masculine world. But Gubelin , the jewelry house that has seven branches around the world , includi ng one In New York, has sold fi ve of 1hese expensive: sets. All were sold in Europe, but some of the buyers were Ameri can. says Josef Gasser, manager of the Fifth Avenue store. Each of these sets contains 402 brilliant-cul diamonds, and Gas.!ltr says this i1 symptomatic of the world's in· creasing interest in dlamonds as an Investment as well as changing lift styles. "Europeans have Invested heavi ly in diamonds ever since they became the world's most popular gem about 300 years ago." Gasser said. dia monds and the abi lity of the DeBeer1 Syndicate to regulate the supply. Nevertheless, up to nov." A m e r i cans have been reluctant to invest heavily In diamonds as Europeans do because they know little about the 11tones compared with Europeans and are afraid of being cheated, Gasser said . They have good grounds for these fears. Gasser added, Bince only 10 percent of all diamonds are of first quality. If you don't know the field you can make costly mistakes in buying them . "But now there are scien· tific ...,·ays to examine a dia· mond and determine its exact quality," Gasser sa id. •·Every je.,.,•elry store ouizht to be able to give the customer a document certi· fyin g the precise qua lity of the diamonds he buys on !he basis of scientific -not subjective evidence.'' He said Dr. Edu ard Gubelin , founder of his company. had helped make such evaluations possible. business is mainly centered In Europe. few Americans can look a! a du1mond and say how good it is , nor do they know v.'hat creates its value . As a mal\er of fact. there is cons id erable un certainty among experts as to .... ·hich of the diamond 's qua!ilie5 has 1he greatest appeal to human emotions. Some believe much of the beauty and emotional appeal of 1he diamond 1s derived from the cutter's art . No other gem is so enhanced by being cut into man\' face ts, each refle c.:t1ng hght in a dif· ferent wav and slightly dif• ferent hue · of the spectrum. Nevertheless . co1nmerc iaU.Y, je\velers ra1e 1he cutting as on· Jy One of fnur factors on .,.,.hich a diam ond's quality must be evalu aleC. The oth\>rs are the caratage or ,veight of the stone. its clarity or lark '1f flaws or in· clusions. and its color, which n1ust be crystal clear and a true blue. Any urf·color dia· mond is valued rathrr lov.•. Diamonds might edd to ''Global innation accelerated this trend because the dia· mond is abou t the only asset In the world whose value can be protected from decline." l\1ost Americans do know that if you are going to buy a diamond. it ts better to buy a amall stone that ls perfect than a big stone that is nawed or of poor color for the same money. In the mattrr of inclusions-, the diamond differs markedly from the emerald . ll'hich for centuries was considered more valuable. , ' e mens eppeerence es well es his finenciel investments. The protection comes from the 1carclty of newly mined But since the diamond Inclusions that would be considered flaws in a diamond ma y make an emerald more lovely and more valuable. _Clubs Focus on New Plans, Officers Installations of officers are list ed on club agendas for Thursday along With programs on community improvement. the Ara b-Israeli \Var, service projects and sculpture. Coast Juniors J\fembers will brainslorm for ideas for projects for the coming year Thursday. !\lay 25. at a meeting of the South Coast Junior \\/omen 's Club, in the Fountain Valley home of Mrs. Arthur 11oelderlin . Jewish Fund telephone requests for con- tributions. Ebell Club l\frs. ,James J\1urar will be installed as president of the .Junior Ehell Club of Ne .... ·port 13each Thursdav, ~1ay 25, at 11 :30 a.n1. in the Stu ft Shirt rest aurant. Newport Beach . Other orficers are t h e f!.lrnes. Larry J\1itchell, Jerrold Cole, Tom Gold and Craig Lyon, vice pres i den ts ; Ric.:hard Figge and Larry Thayer. secretaries: Evan Thomas, t re as u er : and f:ugcne Kovach, auditor and fin11nce. Woman. of. the-year will be named. Toastmistress Wilbrecht, c I u b represen· tative. Niguel Artists Phillip Freeman will lec tu re on 11nd demonstrate sculpture, soft scu lpture and ce ramics Th ursday, May 25. at 8 p.m. in the Crown Valley Elementary School for members of the Niguel Art A~sociation. Ballet NeYt•port Ballet Association will offer the nostalgia of old Newport and the glamour of dance Th ursday. Ma y 25 . wit h a spring luncheon in the Balboa Pa vilion starting .at 11 :30 .11:.m. Proceeds wilt gupport the June performance of "The Training of a Dl!lcer." Ta· tiana Riabouchinska (f\1rs. Da vid Lich!ne) will reminisce aboul the found ing of the Ba Uet Society of Los Angeles. AARP t>.'e"•port Beach Chapter 121. American Association of Retired Persons. will gather Thursday. ~fay 25. for a potluck luncheon in t h e Newpo rt Harbor Lu l her a n Church at 12 noon. A slide show of Ct'nlra l America will be presented by Al Morrison. Executives \Vomen will take charge for !he evening when the Ex· ecutives' Dinner Club of Ora nge Coast meel5 Thurs· da y. ?-.lay 25. in the Newpo rter Inn . Baritone·lenor Pa t r i c If: Sullivan Burke v.·i!I entertain accompanied by John Raraig at the piano. Alumnee 1'.1ann1ng·s Ca f el e r I a , Laguna Hills \lt'Llt be the Joca· lion or the spring meeting "' the \\'ard·Belmonl Al umnae Association Thursday, ?-.fay 25. beginning with a social hour !t ll a.m. New officers will be elected and installed. according to f!.1rs. John Hamshaw, retiring president. Oded E'dan. formerlv of the Israeli A-filitary R a d i o Network. will add re s s meinbers of the Wornen 's Division. United Je wish \V.elfare Fund of Orange Coun· ty Thursday, J\1ay 25. at 11 :30 a.m. in Los Coyotes Country Club, Buen;:i Park. Dmumit Hose-\\'ill perform folk songs . Newport Harb o ri---------------------------------Toastmisl ress Club has an· A countywide campaign is scheduled for Sunday. June 4. from 10 a.m. until noon under the guidance of 1tfrs. Eugene McClintock. 1t1ore than 200 vo I u n tee rs will make nounced a charter dinner on Thursda y, Mav 25, in tht Airporfer Inn. Newport Beach . To be installed are the f...1mes. Jean Van der Borden. president ; Anne Gick. vice president; Kav Bo r eh am , secre tary; Edie 0 Ison. treasurtr. and Rusty Peering Around • cool cotton sl•tpw••t fabric in 1ummtr colors, I ~'""~ ~~>O:z .. :::._:::_;:.,_:i:::;.,~<.Jl!Zit::z:"::Jl""'~:.::i:,01,,...,.,,,, "HOME SPUN" SPORTS ClOTH hi9hly l•vlured, great fo r panfsuit1 , all sporlswear. Reyon, 1ilk, ft•x blend, Value1 to $1 .69 yd. crease re1i1tant, washable pastel colors @® 44"/45 " wid• yd. FlOCKED TERRY ClOTH Gr@ef des lgn1 •nd ~olor combin•lions cre•ted by •n un· u\u•I flock in 9. H••vy, thir1ty terry for robe1, be1c.h towtl1, cover ups, colorful ba th towtl1. RIG. YI.LUIS TO $3 .98 YD . Cetten/Royon Flocklnt Machine 'Wtnhabl• 44 "45" Wld• HOUSE OF FllBRICS alwa ys first quality fabrics · IMMI c .. 1 ,._ -l •lit•I t i S111 Oie1e ,.....,, c..... .... -•• ,.,,., H•M4' Plbe -17th ti lri1tel ,. ...... -14J·llll o,......., ... 11 -Ota11,•l~1rpt 1114 H1rbot 1 .... P91'\ c..tw -L1 il'1l1111 11 St111to11 '9fttrtM -Uf.IJJ4 1 .... PM -121·61JJ .... ...... _ IJI., ltee~111rtl C11e•I 11 Vo-'el -lll•1141 H ........ ~ -111~&J l11c.~ 11"'111., H ... ~ .,._. -197 .. 111 GUEST OF honor at a bridal shower luncheon was Miss Leah Rogers, \\·ho \\'ill ex· change VO\\"S \\'ith Roger K. Laule in June. Hosting the affair in lhe Stuft Shirt rrslaurant \\'BS Mrs. William B. Tritt. Numerous other parties v.•ill fele the Pair. including a buf· fet suppv hos!ed by ~!rs. J\laxine l~irsch uf Pacific Palisadt-s. a Sunday afternoon tea in the Los Angeles hon1r of ~1rs. Edv.•arct S1t·1rart and R Sunday brunch in the Co\111n Heights :mn1e of J\lr. and J.lr~. James F. Gable. ~A~IED rec ipient of the . •nd It ~ Ol'ly t \ltt"''I "'re"' 1w•~' Wt'tl 11111 119 1~ !l>t ~OUT!-t COAST "LA· ZA e~· !l>t lllw•• "'""· • 1no•t l\6 1~1 no"" o" "'' ~ .. ,, ~ l oolr 1-r WI ~~. 4Cf'{KI •111m Wool ... ""I .,,.,..II lilt wtiu Voll'H , .. THE HOUSE OF Tu esday Club of Newport •!arbor's Laurel Award was Mrs. Louis White. The award is based on loyalty, friendship and rrsponsible support of club activities. Heceiving Key Ay,·ards for se rvice \vere the h-tmes. Fred Sinasek. Oona!d Kollanse and Robert Llhlik. \IACATIONING for 17 dav~ 1n the Caribbt>an ,.,.ere ~Ir. aiid ~!rs . Em il Roth of Ne\\'port ·BrRch. The cruise departed fro111 Los Angeles and stopped at Acapul co. Curacao. Sl. Cr(liX :ind Ft . Lauderdale. Also '1 n the cruiSr was i\-tarty Koepsel! of Costa J\1esa. a move • I 1n our ,, < IMMEDIATE ) F'UTURE /';," ,__,.....-~ I.AMI : 'ALUI, 9UAl.ITT, Sll.lCTION & lllYICI AT A DIPfflfNT LOCATION NEWPORT BEAUTY BREAKTHROUGH IN OUR BEAUTY SALON INTRODUCING AN ENTIRELY NEW CONCEPT OF FACIAL CARE, IN THE ADRJ EN ARP EL SKIN HEALTH SPA. WHY IS THE ARPEt.. MEnlOD DIFFERENT FROM OnfERS? ADRIEN ARPEL BRINGS YOU THE FACIAL EQUIPMENT THAT ELIMINATES IMPURITIES IN THE PORES DUE TO OUR DAILY DiVl·RONMENT , SUCH AS AIR: POLLUTANTS. HER UNIQUE METHOD KEEPS NOJ:tMAL SKINS LOVELY AMO MAKES PROBLEM SKINS BEAUTIFUL AGAIN,. TO MAINTAIN A-LOVl:L.1L• COMrtLEXJ ON', ADRIEN ARPEt.. HAS CREATED PURE , NATURE BASED PRODUCTS THAT CAN BE USED AT HOME. THERE ARE CORRECTJVJi; TECHNIQUES FOR DRY, 011.V OR Z>EHYDRATED SKIN, ENLARGED PORES AND ACNE SCA.RS. OU" SPECIAUSTS MASSAGE, VAPORIZE, BRUSH, VACUUM ANO CLEANSE YOUR SKIN . CiRCUU.TJOH IS STIMULATED. MUSCl..ES ARE FIRMED AND TONED. THE ORGANIC: CREAMS, MASK AND FRESHENERS PURIFY THE ll<IN AND CREATE A 1BA.a< TO NATURE.1FEELING.1 HJ<W CONCEPT ~ACE TREATMEHT • 1/2 HOUR, $JO, I HOUR,$20.CAU. HOW ~OR YOUR COllSU~TATION AND APPOll'f'l'MENTe IKAUTY aALOH .. R ·OBINSON'S • FASHION ISLAND • ' t t " \ r • • ' . .. • • .• - Mondly, MIJ' 21, l 9n DAILY )ILOT Coast Wedding Vows Solemniz·ed COATES-SMITH Carden Grove wDI be hon1e rur La\vrtnee Lynn Coates and his bride. !he forn1er Kerry J)evon Sn1ith, y,·no exchanged 1~uptial v o II':: in the Los Angeles l 'emple or tl1e Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saint~- Their parents are !\11'. and 1\Jrs. James C. Smith of ~lun­ tington Beach, !\·!rs. C. It Burgan of Compton anJ Wirt Coates of San Cnbriel. !\trs. James r..t. Pillon y,•as matron of honor a n d bridesmaids '''ere !\lrs. Chris Floyd, !\·liss ?i.larcn Sn1a!J and ?.1iss Kathy Aok i. \Villington P. \Vilson \1·as his ~randson's best 1nan . and ushers ,~·ere Terry Smith , Ronald S1nith and To n1 Langston . The new J\Irs. Coates is a graduate of 1-luntington Beach High School and her husband is a graduate of Dom inguez l-ligh Schoo;. DOLINSHEK-FUNK SI. Joachim's Ca t ho I ic Church, Costa !\1esa \\'as the setting for the ma rriage of Connie Ann Funk and !\-tichael Louis Dolinshek. The Rev . Thomas J . Nevin BEAUTY TIPS read the rites !or the daughter oC Mr. and Mrs. Orris R. Funk of Cmta f\!esa and the son or Louis Ed\\•ard Dolinshek of Syln1ar and ~lrs. Wayne Sir- ner or La Cresccnta. h1rs. Robert Brittsan at- tended as matron or honor ; /\Irs. J-larold \Vicks. Mrs. James Nichols and Miss Tina Dolinshek \\•ere bridesmaids, and Karry Zimmerman \ras the flo\\·er girl. Best man was Ceci l Redway; ushers were E. Michael Porath, J am cs Nichols and Ronald Tabata, and ring bearer was hlark \Vicks. The 0ride is a graduate of A-later Dei High School and at- tended a beauty college. lier husband is a graduate of ?\.1onrovia High School and served \Vith the Na,·y. PARISH-JUDICE Arlene J\.fonica J u d i c e became the bride of John D. Parish Jr. during double ring r ites perforrr.ed by the Rev. Dr. Charles Dieren!ield in SI. Andrew's Pres byte ri an Church. Newport Beach. Parents of the bridal cou ple arc Arthur Judice of Costa f\lesa and !\fr. and f\Irs. John Parish of Huntington Beach. Bridal attendants "'ere f\1i ss Joanne Judice, f\oliss Cynthia Fink and Mrs. Greg Shannon, while the bridegroom 's at- tendan ts were 1'.fike Tayek. James Welles and Donal d Petrovich. The bride is a graduate -0f Huntington Beach High School and attended Golden West an d Orange Coast colleges. 11er husband is a gradu ate of f\1arina High School. Hun- tington Beach and attended OCC and GWC. He is serving In the Air Force. STANLEY-UNR UH Susan !\farie Unruh of lr\'ine and Jatnes Charles Stan!cv of f'..1C\\'port Beach repeated tht>ir nuptial \'Ows before the Rev. Donald Baird In the Com- 1nunity Presbyterian Church. Laguna Bez.ch. Their pare11ts arc !\tr. and !\!rs. John Allen Unruh of Laguna Beach and r..tr . and Mrs. Charles Stanley of Ex· eter. r..1atron of honor \\'as r..Irs. Janice \Yheel er , and bridesmaids were the !\-Imes. Dee Unruh, Janis Rollins and Tina Holland and the 1\-lisses Georgene Smith. Jackie Si nger, Nancy Nopper and Susan llaley. Flower girls "·ere 1-leidi and JI eat h e I' Unruh. Attending as best man was f\1 erle Bas.sell and as ushers, Steve Stanley, Doug Unruh, Lee San1mis, Sam Linsay, James fledge, 1-lcrb Kostlan and Burl:e Simpson. The bride , an airl in e stewardess. attended San Diego State College where she affiliated with Alpha Phi. lier husband is a graduate of UCLA \Vhere he was presi- dent of Phi Gamma Delta. I-le holds the rank of lieutenant in the U.S. Paralroopers. The ne"•ly1veds 11•ill reside in lrvine. BENNETI-BROWN Bethany Jean B r o "' n Harbor High School. They will make their home in Costa ~lesa. CROWN ER-HORN Costa Mesa "-'i ll be home ror the new !\tr. and !\1 r s . Ja1neson Robert Cro1vner. 1vho exchanged wedding pledges anc:i rings ir, Our Lady Queen of the Angels CathOllc Church, Newport \l<ach. The bride, the former Robin Ann Hom, is the daughter o! 1\Irs. Clyde ~t. Horn of Ne wport Beach and the late "Ir. llorn, and the bridegroom is the son of i·tr . and f\1rs. Robert R. Cro"'Tler o f Newport. • MRS. STANLEY and ~lrs. Troy 1-1. Goddard of l-la11·aiian Gardens. ~tiss Jackie Doner 1vas n1aid of hooo· and bridesmaids 11•ere ~!rs. Norinan CHfo.-d . r..liss Pam Bennett and r..1iss Rachel Barber. Flo11·er i:irl and rini::- bearer \1'eri· Chris1in<1 Koimczewski and Jerry God - best n1nn and J:ursts 11Pri' st'ated by U111·)1 and Hussi'11 Go dd art! and John Koparze\\·skt. The ne1v ti.lrs . {;oddard is a graduate uf 1;:d1son High School ;incl hi·r hushand 1s .1n '• " MRS . PARISH alun1nus of Artesia ll 1~h School, 11·her1' he \\•as ca111:1in of the foolb:\11 and hnseb:lll lca111s and oulstnnding senior ;ithlete in b11sebnll Thcv will re.side in ll a\\'Ai1.in c:arde"ns. f\1r. and f\trs. Robert Horn were honor attendants, while the f\lisses Chris Londelius, Tina Rosso. Lir.abelh Cro\\·ncr and Carrie Longo w e r c bridesn1aids. and Ronald La Vern Goddard during Cf'remonies read in St. And re1\''s Presbyterian Church, Ne\\•port Beach by the I?ev. Dr. Charles Dierenfield. dard. /;=====-----......;-:..-=;:;·-"'-=====; Troy Goddard se rvrd as Ushers "'ere Richard 11orn, Cameron Crowner, D a 1 e \Vinters and ?i,;J i c ha e I Woodhead. Parent11 ·of !he couple are !\·Ir. and Mrs. John E. Doner1 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;...;;--;.-.-.-'ifl of lluntinglon Beach and !\fr.II SUMMER SCHOOL The new f\1rs. Cro"·ner anc!1i";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o;;;;~~i[I her husband both a r el l flO• STUDINTS WHO All: grai;luates or Newport Harbor D"'""v WO•KIHG l lLOW GIAOI LEVEL High Schoo l. .. ~I\" • KINDl!llGAll:TEH lllry Hll She attended Orange Coast • JY11• ,.,,. "'Ju1y 11111 College and \'-'as a National AIR STEP -BERNAll:OO • T••111"'11'11"' te •11 •••• , -KIMEL EOWAll:DS Charity League debutante, and _ GERBE1t1cH _ he is a graduate of the PF FLYERS-U.5. KEOS U . f 0.1\CI Wtlr by Oamkln n1versily o Santa Clara -:1~110 O.M• Shan School of Business and spent CirrttHv• S11M1 ''' 0ttldr111 h P 225 L 17tll St. tl\'O years in t e ence Corps Cost• Mnt1 . 141•2771 RADCLIFFE HALL Prlw•t• School CALL 635·7892 111 So. Citron. Anah1 /m COMFLETE SHOE & .1'UGGAGE REPAIR ... RESTYLING r:? .. Ro binson 's Shoe Repair U11 Your Robin1011 Ch•r9• Third l•wel of Elew•lor in Peru . Cro11•ner also "'orked '''ithl~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=====================,,-' the Peruvian government for two yea rs as an economic ad- visor. \Vould you buy 11. netv ,va1·d- robe \\'ithout fi rst trying: ii on? OF COURSE NOT! But, you buy your J\take up with- ou t trylnJ.: It flrsl. f\lnyix' thnt's ,,·hy you hn\·pn't Ix-en 111:=========--=, too hapJ!Y \l"ilh rour 111·"· bcca1ne the bride of Roberl Edward · Bennelt d u r i n g cercn1onies read in St . .Joach im Catholic Ch u r c h , Costa f<.ft!sn by the Rev. Thon1as J. Nevin. They are !he daughter and son o( i\lr. and Mrs. Richard S. Brown of Bakersrield and ti.Ir. and J\·lrs. Robert L. Ben- nett or Cos ta f\.1 esa. BAKER-SCHILLING Peggy \\fray Sc h i 11 i n g became the bride of Dewey Douglas ·Baker , during late morning rites in the Garden Grove Community Church. Their parents are !\1 r. and ~frs. \Villiam H. Schi lling of Costa ?i.iesa and Mrs. Edward Hanson of Orange. look. At youi-i\fet"lt• Nnr- man Cosn1etie Studio you can try you1· 1nak£>up on. "·e teach you corl'l.'ct npplicnt1on and color co-ordinate your makeur to your ,1·ardrob£'. We •pply INDIVIDUAL EYELASHES SATURDAY, June 10, l lo 3 Pllt. FREE EAR PIERCING "'ilh lhr purchase nf ear- rings $f.t5 10 $12.tS Merle Norman Cosmetic Studio 271 ~ 17th St. Co1t11 Mos11 Telephone '46-C021 Petting Zoo! T ues., !.lay 23-Sun., .Atay 28 lovely cuddly little live baby a nimal' from all ouer the world-Jeff's famous petting i:oo! Open da il y in t~e mall, I 0 am to 8 pm, 35 cents admission ... Huntington Center at Bea ch and Edinger, Sa n Diego Freewa y SMART SLIP-ONS REG. 3.97 300 . Polyl'S lrr. nylon or url"n Rerylic slip-ons lu ns~r.rt­ ed styles & c•,lnr~. ~ites ::12-38. DOUBLE KNIT Flare Pants REG. 1.96 511 J j .1 High fashion atyle j polyester pants to compliment our smart tops. Assl'd. spring colors. Slzr1 8 10 18. !\liss Bernadette Bro"'" \\'as n1 aid of hon o r and bridesmaids were th e f\1isses Jennifer and f\lichel!e Brown. and flower girl "·as ri.tiss Janine Brown. Chuck Bennett served as best man, and ushers were Dick Bosworth, K ev i n Ols\vang. Richard West and Ron Jtogerson . Murray Brown carried the ring s. The ne1v ~frs. Bennett is a graduate of Costa Mesa Higil School and is majoring in in- halation therapy at Orange Coast College. Her husband is an alumnus of Newport ?i.frs. Phil Knox was matron or honor and bridesmaids "'ere f\1rs. Bill Schilling, f\·liss Judy f\1adden and Mrs. Donnfl" Smith. Ushers "·ere Schilling, Knox and Tony Lawrence. while Davi d \\ford was best man. Flower girl and ring bearer "'ere Pam Schilling and Kevin Meehan. Both the newlyweds are graduates of Eslancia lligh School and he attended Orange Coast College. They will .reside in Costa Mesa. GODDARD-DON Ek Nuptia l pledges were ex· changed by Susan Mae Doner DAILY 10·10, SUN. 10-7 LADIES MINI GOWNS With Matching Panties Reg. 3.96 300 Cotton . aretate and ny· 1011. Soft sn1ooth colors. Sizes S. M. L. .. MISSES COTTON SLACKS REG. 2.96 222 f -~ "' I ' f ' • I r f ~ I -·· l •. • t Misses slacks in high I fashion color< and slylcs · galore. Sizes 8-18. '· '· . ' J ' • "" ' • Start Now ••• You Can Lose •• . . . ... -• ' ·2 : ~~ing ~~i~. Siz~s in · 1· Month!'.' " ~·~~ ·•: 1.I • ~ ·" . : ,. " . ",;1.··; I • , ~ .,I ,. . . ' I J ' '~ ~.;t <"'';..,' , ~1'4 ·.tifif,j.4 . • ...· ~ ..... • ·• • • . ~(,.• ,, , ...... ~ .·'"'· ,,. '. • ; If you're embarrassed to put on a bathing suit because of too many pounds and too many inches, come In to see us. In the relaxing atmosphere of the salon, you'll have a program of•weight loss prepared just for you. So, to "get In the swim of thlng1," see Gloria Marshall first, then ••• enjoy I Enjoy Personalized Attrntion in Semi·Privatr ftcilitin No "fad" diets, dangerou1 drug1 or gruellng exercise. ' C1rol JUl1t111r11• to•! S7 PO<Jndt M'>d ..,,. ..,,.. • lllle 1t lo • Ill:• J, ft ..... r..str ... '°1inlllil• lo !tot ~.)tit hwblrid-" ohlchll cOllldrn IH ~ proud of 11'4 ··-C.!OI' ... ,., XAndlr loll .... ena 22111 s•und1 on ll•t l*ION<lll:M Okw\lt "'*""n P'oOFlllll Hew ••• ,.... !Or --11111111 #"! u .u The price 11 right $1.50 per treatment on any progr1m ~nd your new figure Is guaranteed in writing I !IJ , ·lf& . I /J/J • II ".":".:::; r.tYl1(;t 'a/b1;ztl,ffj FIGURE CONTROL SALONS Open Gally 9 to &-S.1urdly 9 to 4 Nanon'• leadlng flour• control system 430 Pacttic Coast Highway, Newport Beach-Phone 642-3630 ft 11~1 IN 9f .. .._ .., Cl•bl • • ,, ' 1, ..... ' . , ' I' I AIM: ''TN City" o,...., 1• ,, .. un ... s..tti, "'·0211 1 ....... '"· 1060 N. ,, ... Cel· ..... 111-1611 1 c..1-. c~. oe...,, ..................... i.. , .. ... COSTA MESA 2200 HARBOR Bl VD. (Cornor of Wllsonl • HUNTINGTON BEACH 19101 MAGNOLIA (Cornor of G1rfltld) Ni9M H...,..... C>thrie, , ...... , S. DS.,., s..t. '-'-'' ......... ,.,_.., .. , ,.,.,,,.., "* • ...,,.,,., .,,.,..,ifUf'e, t.0Uldn1 ~ o~ 1m __________________ _, I , . ' Jf OAILY PILOT Race Play Just Fuel For Bigot By WILLJA J\.f GWV!R NEW YORK jAP1 "Tough lo Get Help," a shah. by comedy about race reJa. lions. appeared Thu rs d a y night al Broadway's Royale Theate r and 11wlftly <JUatlfled for early ohlu•lon Beneath a fac1I~ facade of j o k e s haSf"d on eth· nic cllches and propped up with Carl Rr1ner 's g!1h direc- IJon . 1here 1s evidenr sordirl nast iness Alleged sa t1r1c ex· aggerat1on setms aimed al de:lighting bigots on both sides or the color line A complacent black couple , \.\•hen the play by .s1eve. r.ordon begins. is hask1n1: 1n 0.AILY "tLOT UtU ll~olt L:.ur ban1te togc!herncss v.·1th a 'DON'T 00 IT' -!la nk Sorkin (r ight) gasps at the rich advert isini:l rxecutive and' un-pr1cstly act11J n of Dave Gilm ore in this scene his buhhle·brain spouse. from "Catch ~1e If You Can" at the Huntington Beach Playhouse. "When the lwat rorncs up on ------'-------------------- & rold winter day." sa .vs ~ood old Luther.Tom in lhe first of endlPss Asides 10 !hf' audif'ncc, "ii don '! know v.ho 's p;i y1ng and warms us all ·• Meanwhile Beulah kee ps s1 ng inJi: And pray1 nJ,t those good old darkie lines that arc supposed to make everyone laugh. Acr011s the Jiving room. !he othe r pa ir caricature whil e ll beral1SJJ1 v.•ith bromidic in· tensity as preparations are made for the mac;trrs to be servants in cclrhration of Leroy·s imminent relurn after fo ur year~.' absence. Leroy, Lu!her and Brula h's son , lurn11 out of cours e lo he a hJack mllttant who has blown up a nearby courthouse and plans to get $10,000 at gunpoint for getaway. The ~nsui ng complex con· fusion lnclude1 an awkwardly' staged dream sequence during which Abe Lincoln and others convert dad into an even fiercer freedom f i g h t e r • Outhouse humor and cheap ii· logic 1patter everywhere. John Amos, Lillian Hayman and John Danelle impersonate the principa l bla ck threesome, Dick O'Neill and Billie Lou Watt the latent raclsts. O'Neill joined the cast last week, replacing Jack Cas!ildy who certainly knew when to scram &uch tasteless farce. Right on with "Tough to Get Help" -ta the trash pJle. CBS Airs Special On Nixon in Russia Dy CYNTHIA LO"'RY NEW YORK IAPl -Presi· dent Nixon's visit to Russia was al the lop of telev ision news over the weekend and, nat urally. was the principal subject of C:BS' Sunday even· ing "60 f\1inutes." Mor lf!y Safer flew to Mosco w ahout three weeks ago and wit h a Sovie! fil m crew and an official Soviet guide -both required by the authOrities ....., made a sort or visu.al Baedeker suggesting what the Nixon party might find In the Russian capital. fot1osc:ow in 1972 seems to have the same concrete-and· steel profile of other great cities of Europe and the United States. broken here and there by the cnion·sha~d domes of old churches and the neo-gothic buildings favored in Stalin's regime. The number of automob iles has tripled to some 200,000 in the past four years. Safer observed drily that the city handled lhe traffic problem well : There are only about a dozen gas stations to service all cf them. It was a bland. good· humored, timely gu.ided tour. Later. !he program reran film of Presidcnl Nixon·s "kitc hen debate" i~ f\1oscow 13 years ago when the then vice president had an ex· c .~ a n g e with Nikita Khrushchev and for which Nixon himself supplied the narration ~upon his return home. finals of the "Mi1s USA Beauty Pageant." Saturday night en CBS came live fro m the garish stage of the auditorium of a resort hotel in Puerto Rico. It dragged along for two hours before Miss Hawaii was chosen from among 51 contestants. There was tape of all the conte.stants pa r ad in g in bathlng suits against an ocean background. Later. the dozen semifinalists marched around the horseshoe-shaped runway fn the same outfit.s. There > " Huntington Mystery 'Catch Me' Retains 1 TONIGHT'S Fine, Funny Flavor ~, A~~ 6 •~~!~~,~~~~plays ~ the title role of a tough 4N~~1~ detective in Part 1 of this two--part movie. ' ment is vtell played by Dave ! By TOM TITUS "CfttH Ml 1,. You C&H" Gilmore. Gilmore possesses '' jli tomectv·,.,v•!••v b~ J1c ~ W1ln1•ock NBC CJ 8:00 -Laugh-In . Emmy winner Jean Staple- ton joins Sandy Duncan . Jo Ann Pflug. C~arles Nelson Reilly and Joe Namath on the guest star hst. t'::!,.:-V1~1,i~~~e·~~ dd'.!~~...., ~r11 1:~.~ the resonant voice to carry off f llr,/I m1n101• M••• $()!-. H'I h d d h' For lhe third time in u fJ'ltntr Jo• L-11, 1ec.nnlc11 dl•~(tor his clerical c ara e an is • u" 1-lt "l"l'OI'· P•t1tn!fd ~•i111vl •~ if J I many seasons, "Catch Me If 1u•o•v• 11 1:l0 ""-" J1,1ne ' ,, changes of pace are s 1.11 t y KCET ED 8:00 -'"Black Coal. Red Power .. " dccumentary proves the dl!'vastating effects of &trip ing on the Indian econom y in Arizona. Th i! i· min· ll>t 1>1!nlln11on lletc~ Plevt>ww . 2110 You Can" has blossomed en a Mtln r. Munrln1ron llt1ch. accompli.shed. local community t he 1 t er TH• c.asr Steppmg 1n late and pulling Otnotl (O<b&n J""" LWlll>,..4n litage, and it is a credit to ln!C>tclo• L••l111 . . Matti" ~uc1.. off a hilarious cameo role as 1 k d El 11111'1~ Mttrtll Ann Hadd•~ I CBS IJ 10:00 -Sonny and Cher. Th~ e:onos ~·elcom_e Merv Griffin and Georgina Rizk . tht reigning ~11ss Uru· au thors Jae Weinstock 1n ~.,~,, 11.111"'. O•vr G•l~"l•t the .Jev.•ish delica te ssen owner 1• \ll illie Gilbert lh.al their offbeat Ji:.'i1rk11 ······J11~r o~~~~~~; is Ha nk Sorkin. v.·ho can trig· h verse. comedy-mystery remains in· Evwt1t P••~•· •· G1er9• "•1g~ ger laughter with a popeyed f' triguing when all the twists -----------loo k alone. Sorkin probably is t and turns of the plot are by Levine, I he wisecracking the funniest of the three actors KHJ 6 10:00 -C.Ounc1I Debate. Former ~ov~ Edmund ~·Pat" Brown is a special guest in a discuss10D on racial discrimination in politics. now welt known in adva nce. Catskills cop who skillfully v.·ho have played the Sidney This time around, the Hun. spreads a flatfoot facade over .character. tington Beach Playhouse in the character of a tough , Completing the cast are , '"'""'""°""":::::O:r:JIC""l:i::'.':r""'1""'"""""""""""".r.l the scene cf the not~uite-sharp lawman. Fuchs ha s a George Ralph and Jeani ... ..lo~ ·- perfect crime and a brand ticklish task -that of garner· Griescheimer. who are quire new cast (the first two shows ing the greatest laughs and re· effective as Loughman ·~ boss r had the same performers in maining the commanding and his weekend paramour . two roles) is carrying out the figure onstage -and he J\.iiss c;rieschcimer's entrance chicanery. And, while it is im· performs it exceptionally well. is calculated to give the au· possible lo view it with rirsl· Merrell Ann Haddan as Lhe die ncc a start. time freshness, It Is surprising substitute bride is a shade Joy Lobe!l"i; sci is al· how comical the dialogue re· below the leve l of the other traclive. though a little im· ma ins, even en the third view-two principals. Wh ile Miss maculate for a mounta in ing. Haddan is a compe tent actress retreat . Lighting . by Burt Ale1 Koba holds the direc-who creates a smooth and ffarri ngl on, is well designed. torial reins for }junlingtan calculating character. she particularly the auto headlight Beach's version, and while the lacks the extra bonus of inner effects. cverall produclion quaUt y is technique which could more "Catch ~1e If You Can" con· not quite up to Koba 's past en· clearly define her transitions. tinues for four more weekends deavors, his "Catch Me" is an The role of a pseudo priest as the closing product ion of entertaining and enjoyable whose eternal presen c e the season at the Huntin~ton evening. There ls little beyond stymies toughman·s attempts Beach Playhouse. 2110 Main a noticeable c~ning night to squirm out or his predica· St., Huntington Beach. edginess to mar the pace andl---'-------'-----'---=------ navor of the show. The story, as much as can be implanted, concerns an advertising m a n honey· mooning by himself in a Catskills cabin -his bride has run 'off in a pique. er at least a Torino, and our hero enlists a police detective ta search for ·he"r. The plot thicken.s, as they say, when ll luscious blonde enters. claiming to be the adman's wife, and has the papers lo prove it. John Laughman as the bereft bridegroom w o r k 1 himself u~ into the required nervous fit and sustains this condition beautifully throughout the show. His cnly weakness is a tendency toward incomplete acticn, a strange reluctance to face his ad· versaries head-on. The standout performllnce of the night is delivered by Martin Fuchs 1s Inspector ~ .• ,,., • .,,• .;., ' f U*"l ' ... V ILA,.-lllr A•l3A I ~. :SA\M•• ~ '-;QQOY'~ltEN Exclusi'"" County Run STARTS MAY 24 1sk1n:rnm:m • •••• • ••• ••••••••••••••••••••• • • ••.ACM •LVD • .AT l!LLtS • + ••T. c:.cM.•T KW!t. • .... ,. O<•GO ~. . ' . fOWAROS II A II fl OR ,;,~·;, 2 • .~• • ••I• •~ WllSO .. SI · • • ., • • t-•t ro•1• Alt Incredible edv1nture .,. fhlt journe,. IM~ond lmagln1tlonl iVDAILYLOa i Monday Evening MAY 22 5:00 IJ 111 Nns Je rry Dunphy 0 KNIC Nin l om Snyde1 0 Tl!t 111 Y1ll17 O Nns BenU. SehubteJi: 0 (fl Wiid Wiid WISI ®J NBC Nt•J m Thi nfnlstGnH Q) I Dr11111 ti J11nn!t (Jll Plryhoust Hew Yort EID Hodt•PDdl• Lod.11 el Notldtro 34 m Dewrt Jlepiit · ®i M1)'b1nj RfO ai) Pr11unlt Udtd Ala Jacinto Q) News Jim H1wthorn1 (52) Thm Stoo11s 6:30 0 Movie: (C) (90) ~Mldi1111" P.111 l (dr•) "&a-Rreh11d W1dm1rk, Htn· f"f Fond1. Susan Clark. Huiy Gu1r· d1no. The traub!es of 1 brilli1nt New Yark deltC11vt whou ethics bter quesllonlnr but whole cour11e dots no!. (]) CIS NIWI W111er Cronk11t ®)Tht Ma1111 f1ctary m Andy Griffith Slicw m "'""' t nd tht l'raf1uo1 fD ~ Cl\111 Cooks "Fil~. Chlnut Style"' m Tr•nur1 9Cr• Aun m l'fll'*lll l'olldtl (52) H11dshop Ulla! Mintz m lady Crltlltlt Show m o.w1d ''"' "'°' fl) !IJJ Sptd1I If 1111 WM• "ll1ck Coil. Red PoR't r" St11ri111 docume11• h'Y probln1 the dev1st1lln1 1Htcts ol 1t11p minin1 on lhe natur1I •con· omy of N1v110 i nd Hopi lndi1n1 h~· 1111 en r1seN1!10111 In nortl!wutern Ailzon1. Ill u ~ttOaid• m btlclon Ct11tr1I 1!30 m MIN Criffl11 IMtl '"PrK1nt11ion ef New1p1p1r [nttrpriHs Msocl•· 11011 TV Stouts Aw1rds ."' Sthtdul1d 1uests 1r1 limes C11n. P1trici1 Ntal, Art fr1nr.o, Silly Dtl W1lll11m. t:GG IJ (I} Htr1'1 Lucy (R) Gutst Dnld ' frost 1"k1 to hire 1 "b1bysltt1r" so 111 Un sleep undisturbed durlnc his fr1qu1nt tr1n1-A!l1ntic fll(l'lb- 1nd winds up w•th Lucy . 0 IJj m MIC Mond1y MD¥11: (t) (2hrJ "The lmp1ti1nt H11rt" (JI) (drt) '71 -C1rri1 Snod1r11S, M~ chit! Br1ndo)ll. Mlch1tt Ctins!1nlln1, A raunt socJtl workt1 becom1s 1mo- t1on1Jly Involved !11 m1ny ol lh• c.a1es sht h1ndlt!. 0 (]) (1) a> AIC Mond1y Mtvlt: (C) (2•r) "Yltln1 Qu11n~ (1dw) '67 -Oon Murr1y, Ctril1, DtH'l1hf Hous- ton. And11w K111. lht be1ut1lul tribo t i ru ler In 1nci1nt Briton Milt 11 overthro• !ht Ro1111n OWJp1tlon forces. f!I DD·h ·MI OJ n. Vlrrtnf1n ai) Nowl1 7:001J CIS Nm Wt II tr Crnnkltt l :lO II (JJ Oorii D11 (JI) An1!1 Ind 0 Dori1 1tt1nd 1 prtvi!w of tn tr:• . m NIC NIWI John Chu1ullo1 hiblt of flm ous ob)tcts d'1rt, i nd a 1t1t ill• e1oc• (1) Truth Of ColUt'l[uincn !Mith wind up IS w1!neues to 1n II• ([) Drlfl!ll tempt by lhlt¥ts to atttl th• collte-t111n. 0 Whirs MJ Unt? Q NIM Wildt Jolin Fullmer ®J Ad••·lZ m News Hu1h Williams m I LM Lucy ID I Dtt1m ol Junnle (JJ.) loot ltil tl1l Hlltory If Art "MUMUl!ll" f£I Fllf!I Od)'IMT "Yojlmba~ (1') IE Uni Pltprl1 • 11 Cl•IM Qi U 'ltl a n1.: cc1 "H111s tt .,,._ ... ,. csn 111e111 ,,... HeJIYl'I04 hrt m ...,, ..,. Plmr1 10:«1 n rn s.nny '"' ai... eo .. ., 7:30 IJ SI.Ind u, 11141 QMr John tltYld· Hour ~'"' ~riffln 1nd Miu Unlvtrw, san cuuts. Ge<0rr1n1 R1rk, auut. O Dr. Slmt• loclt '1Wll Poinb ol 0 Council Debate Formtr Gowmor 1 Pilcl!lork"' p111 I (RJ Dixon Miiis E_dmufld G. "Pit" Brown 11 1 1p .. II thr11ttntd by 111 tpidtmic i nd e11I cuut. Alio 1ppe1rlnr trt Coun· "Get me out of here. Dr. lockt w111\1 to ditltri 1 QUI/· tllmen Ern1nl Be1111rdl, Gil bert llflld• tntint to pr1vent P!GDll tram Cflm· ~J . .-11.hur S'."'du ind John ferr1ro. int or t11vini. His efforts i re D1scuu1on _will lntlYde temment IR • • I can make you rich and eb'Ong. Strong and rich." • TIM HAS A PET RATTUSNAKE, WHEN TIM GETS MAD· STANLEY GETS DEADLY! IN MISSION Vll!JO EDWARDS CINEMA VIEJO ... ~~ ,-,,.,. ,., .. ·~' . ' ' thw1'11d by Dr. Selltis end Chief r1c11I d1stnmln1t~n In IJOh!its. Din P1lm1t, who bo1h lttr Isolation m News P1t1 M1llu, Ktn .lo1111 would lfleet th• 1r11'1 •r.onomy m Dr1p1t IJ Sporb: Ch1IJe1111 T11m of KJ~s-I)]) Ma1tt1pl1e11 Th11trt ts City Cllitb (Lin Dtwatin. Willie Em llillcon Alf'ntlno l.ln11r, and Otis T1ylor) tOmpete (5Z) Lt LIJ1nd1d1111011111 wltPI !ht t11m cl lh1 0.1111 Cow· 10:15 0 Anille Wrtp-U, boJ• (Mtl Renfro, Cotch Tom Lin· cf'}, i nd Crtil Morton). ID:JO 8 Nm Gtar11 Put111m (I) To Tell ttl1 Trvth Qt 1111 Cosby Show Cil I 0111111 ti J11nftit al U S.llnlu 0 Miiiion $ M0¥1t: (C) (2hr) "'11· Qt MO'lf1: "Cu11! Diven tum 11' ill• Cunll(httf' (w1s) '66-(52) Co•duci1 Cul1Nb!t Rablrt T1ylor. Cllad Evtrett An1 Mutin. kl ••·1unsrln1er 1lli.; flim. I l:OO 1J (I) Ill Ntws sell with I ll KtWtf killer 111d I Q Q§j m Ntwi M1xlc111 l h1 lo twen11 lht death of 11 'ood Nun Dtl!IM Sh1klri111 h11 p11enb who wtrt murde1td for (l) l'tril De111h111 Show their l111d. + fJ A-.~ N 0 Lift M1M 1 Dul w w .., m Hopl't HtfMI Q w..tt : "Stt11t1 Ill t Wtl lftwo Q) I]) Drtpd •ten" (dr1) '64-Klm St1n111• (J}) In the Spotllfllt ID Ttvtlt « Con114•tM1s fD Cltrntth111 ,,, llJ Movlt: "Mtnrtu TI!tl Chtl-m Ltuit t1n1td ~ Wtrtd'' (sci -Ii) 'S7-n11 ~ Mlru1U!1 Ytlffr Show Holt, Audrty Ot!ton, Ef) Sportl Cll1llt1111 (S2) He1dthtp (RJ (52!, Mowt1: ,12~r) "lulltb If ltl· 11:301J (I) CIS L1!1 MMe: (C) ""t'lllo lots (d11) J~[dw1rd G. Robin · ltlllCI Yalll(' (dr1) 'SI-Burt Liii· son, Humph rey Bo1ert. c1ster, Joanne Dru, llobtrt Wtl~et. l;OO I)()) Cw11111101r;e '"Stlow Trtln.. 0 [O'J fD Johnn1 C1rwn Roy Cl11t Conti. (R) Diiion la tomtrtd b)o tnd Rodney 01n11rlield 1uut. thrH Siena lfttt lit UClllNIS from 0 Fonirt lolln1 Am'l1ndo Muniz lh1 tr1l11, •!Id tht p1wn1trs dtcldt vs. Jl1ut Sorti no In 1 10..rtunf to tum !ht two min owt to t11t wtlttrwtidil llo!.il. (l1ntitlvt) lndltnL fJ Cil Cl) QI Diet: Ctwtt Lllllt f!I 9J m lluffl·l11 (R) .11111 St1· Uq11111 rutsts. pl1ltlfl, Sindy Oufla'!I, Jo Ann Pflua. Gt Tt Tiil lllt T"111 Ch1rlu Ntlson Reilly ind Joe N•· tntlh 111 umeo I UUIJ. ll:ll(I QI llhrit: '1\e M1ti111 If Miiie• U Ctlll01'nlt An11ls a..N1 Afl. (com) ·~1 -E'l'tlJn ktrti, 1111 VS. 0.kltnd Atlllttics 11 0.k· IZ:JD 0 Movit: IC1 "'DNltl It Nl•Wt l111d. De1t11 11 Quiet" 1111¥) '67 _ T ' 0 (I) (I) II Mlnd11 fltlPt S,.. Ktnd1ll. l rlll Htrrh. llft1 citl '1ht Ettie l "d tht Kiit" (R) A GE MDftOfrlm apeclll whlcfl Up. l:OO (})DD Cll 91 ..... turtt tl'lt m1]1stlc ftttionl .. twt 1!301J .._..: "T-. WI .... (mys) 'U tftdtt11trtd prtd1tory ..._ -Mhur Kenlltdy, larNn fftlt. • - I -.. , ' - 'My Siste r Ei leen' Costa Mesa Stages ,: Screwball Comedy By TOM TITUS 01 llie O•lly ~1111 St•fl "MY SISTEll EILl!EN" .. A C0"1~'f bV Jo1eoll ~ill Ill Ind Choice for the l'Q)e Of the One of the pleasant pieces of Je•om• c ~rt1orou, olrtci~ bv P111 W k hi theatrical memorabilia left in i~1~":~~1n1..,,~~7i~1 ~~.~~~:~, ot~1~ rec . an at ete constantly the current n 0 st a t g i a ~· •r:; ~~~~. bvM{~" ~r:1~·· 1r:;~:~ in training. but he handles hi!I backwash I., 1•-type or play Frldevs •'Id ,!Mlh,irdevs ,, t .)11 ""OU•ll assignment quite well. Alan I~ Jun• l ti lne Community llecreerlon best described as a "screwball Ct111t• on "" Or1ng1 co u n 1 v I-fart can be faulted only for •F~ .. 1.'.'•'-,. 1. Coit• M111 . Att1rv1Uon1 8,·,,1·n, "-d comedy." They don 't really -.. g ne\1·s papermen a Vd write them any more. 50 com· THIE cAsT name in tiis uproarious EH"" s11erwooe1 . Deb•• £111''" performance as a leche munily theaters are probing Rurn snerwood .•.. Di•n• s ..... cer rous th •• rchl· .. es to unearth them. Mr AP-'OU' ·•· ·••• J1ck Mu ... ., reporter. Barbara Garlich, as • TM 'Wrect ......... Gene 8tllt-<l•~I !h . . cn1c Cl•rk • • . . • . . • Al1n H••• e sv.·1ng1ng former tenant, There actually ere only two Robert &•t•• .. .. . 11rn ... ,k••m•n . "t f b II Heltl W•de -· .•... Lori Fur1ntr gets her message across with prerequ1s1 es or a screv; a v',••n Ll1>111ncon .... . Ron Gibb an ••clamati"on poi"nt . h Pl•! -. ...• ll1rbar1 G•rllcn comedy -a uge cast of 0111~,, Lon•1111 .. .. Lot111 Leoo:>old ""Usual characters and a p•.ot Jen!>en · · wim.,,, 5""''' Bil! Ackerman, as t h e ... , Flelchtrr(on1ul{Ccn1~k Peul C1l<1wtll scattered w i t h unexpected M" w1<11 . G~111 spen,,,,,. pla iner .sister 's beau, gives a comings and goings i 11 ~:;.~:.~~n1r.r ·:··pf~1J:10~;\~':;'f solid and convincing account First kid -·· E<IW••d A1n or ht"1nseJr • r h numbers large or small. One second kid Kelly s11111torn in one o I e ----r the better e•amples 1·5 "'.·I." Por!utu~•• c1c1e11 Dom C11111e110, Jonn straightest ro les of the show. r -v :~ • IJ•<11•. 5h:t Fi<ltt. Woooh F1nthou~tr J k , \ Sister Eileen." now ~ing ------------ac 111urray is less belie1·able • DAIL.'!' ,ILOT 5!111 Photo • given a most enjoyable reviva l the outside world as seen as the Greek landlord, P<!rtly 'HI , THER E' -Barbar.a Garlich \\•aves pixlllatedly at her astonished nrigh· on the stage of the Costa Mesa through the window of a base-for lack of a credible accent bor s_ (from. left, Roi:i Gibb. Debra Ensign, Alan Hart and Diana Spencer! as Civic Play~ouse. n1ent flat. With this single and party for deficiencies in she ts carried 3\ray 1n a scene fro1n '"J\·ly Sister Eileen'' at the Costa Mesa Ci1·ic: E·1 h gimmick, "Eileen" is elevaled tirning. Lori F'urtner, as Playhouse. With" 1 een." t ough, there B d. • · ••. d · from a so-•~omedy to an ene tels pariamour, a Is o ---'-------------------------~--------1s a u1lf requirement. without """'"'" r II - h. h h r· r 11 absolute romp. a s a bit short of her sweet· w 1c t e irst two would a and-sour character. rather flat. This is a vie"· of Pati Tambellini, in directing GWC ~~~s ~~a ~1:~~e po~~~ti~~ ~~~~~r;~~!r~~~gt~~~ne1~m~a~n; ,_ Off e t"S Summer elevated passing sho"'. though . the space for comings and in the wrong apartment. Tl1eate1~ ··-00 •O " .,\IO• I' ,.,.. .... . ... ,., -• • .. <• .... , ... ~.-~ """' '"'' Mo··,, ~flktiA+! ~o·,.l~ l!l!o "W.0.T;S' ~ Pix?" ., .. ,, '~' ntHMCDL.Oll ,:.,, ••od ·-w ' "SINTllllAlS Of Slll NCI" ........ , .... , ... , ........ ,. ' , .................................. . 0 ".-er Peed Gera'd.ne Chapi.n ZP6 ·n-......, .. .,,,_ ._.,..,. l!ClocOUll ",.,_,..,_ 2Nl De~•••~ "'TNI 'lrD ,.,II"' .. • • 11roc .. '"'" •• • ~"'° • • ••7 ·•1101 • """""''lf0N ll~OCH .,, ,~,,.., .•• ••••n.,oo •W• 'OSlllvtl Y HID~ tu!~• I GENE HACKMAN 201-., CENTURt .fO~ P!IESlNlS ~:~¥1~,~~ roSll~R v !'-OS tursOA f ,.,,. Bo•t>o•B "-'" ''., "'PU'' If 011 A CNAIH~ IN T .. l Wit™'"'·" .. CC•fl f" <•l· Wl lf10••J•10 I GCl OIO •I" Ill Htl ""'" u•"• .. e., ~ '". , .. '"''. 1 ... .,TnlHoll"""' "THI BLACK BILLY •fib ,. ....... . Plus-"WIE ND MURDIRS" ,,. .. W" < 'f<! ~ ..... N <?~2 ..,, .. ,.., ......... .,,, .. , .. .. .. .... ...... ...... ... .. .. .. 2nd. ~ ,_ "Tltt Ctrty Trulmt11t" goings is a bit cramped. Often \\r1tliam Spencer is quittly a scene of questionable con-riolous as the burly Sy,•edish A sum1ner program in sequence onstage will be janitor. Louis Leopold as a theater arts l41ill be offered al embellished "''ith some de(t "'alchful cop and Lois Wilson Golden \Vest College beginning upstaging at the "'indo\\'. . as an even more watchful June 16, officials at the Hun· mother are both effective. The Joseph f'ie!ds-Jerome while Penelope Dueight's frac· Chordorov comedy is set in tional scene as a prospeclire 1950, 1\•hen New York was s1ill tenant is .a complete ho\\'I. tington Beach campus ha\"e announced. Fun Citv. and follows the misadver11ures of two Ohio After the incredibly funny seeond act curtain scene in-.sisters-trying to make it bi~ in valving a quartet of admiring the big to111n _ One is a stunning Portuguese naval c ad et s , heaut ,v '>l'ith designs on anything . would b e an- Broadll'ay: the other is at-ticlimactic, which is why the The program. which n1arksl the first lime theater has been ~ Offered in summer session a! the college. y,·i!J culminate in ' the presentation of L11·0 playsl tractive -but plain by com· Parison _ and ha r b 0 r 5 third acl might appear to drag a bit. What comic bor.bons literary ambitions. emerge from this act are sup- in the ne1v C o mmunity Theater in August. ~lection or the pla ys has not been an- nounced. The Costa ~1esa production plied chiefly by the skills of displays splendid casting in Hart and Miss Spencer. '"\\'e have An outstanding these tl\'O central roles. Debra ''My Sister Eileen" may not new facility," said theater Ensign plays the title part. the be the se ason's best cumedv, arts inst ructor ch a r I es 1·o!uptuous blonde. with a but it is up there among the I sharp balance bet v.· e en most entertaining and im· ri-titchell , "and an opportunity I mid111estern s11·eetness and aginalive. It continues for tv.•o to have adults and high school. gritty determination. Diana more weekends. Fridaj•s and students experience the fu !l 1 Spencer is equally effective as Saturdays. a_t ~e Community range of theater ans." I her brainy sister, tossing orr Center aud1lor1um . on the Students \.\"Ill become in· s e I f-depreealing comrnenls Orange County Fa1rgr1Junds, . \\•hile allowing a look at the Costa r..fesa. ~olved v.'1lh acting, stagecraft ., real v.·oman behind the wit. 'f;=:::::::::::::::::::;=]! Emerging as 1he solid st and-[1 out in the large ensemble is Ron Gibb as Ute timid drug- gist who pi;rsues Eilee n v.•lth "free lunches and giveaY.'ay gifts. Gibb employs his J\1arvin Kaplan mannerisms to peak effect in a h i I a r i o us performance that sets a dif· ficult pace for the others to foJIOY.'. Gene Benedict is an illogical -$t11rrl"9 Clterles l ro•so11 Jock P11la11ee ALSO PLAYINCi "'CABARET' IS GLITTERINGLY BRILLIANT. IT DESERVES TO BE A CLASSIC." i woodJ' allem '1 1 "bananas" -Wlnlrtd Blevint:. l.A .Hotrald-E.u~1 Tecllnicob4' IPGI., !Mtribuled bv AIJitd Mm lm SOUTM COAST ruZA l·Cm.11 h • SAG-1711 Ate cm THO.TIE I ·Df1rce -999-0832 Wtek~~~s : 6:00, &:1$. 10 :1.S p.m . S.t. & Sun.: 1:30. 3:41, •:OO, 1:15, IO :l'll p.m. Ale tm TIIUTlt · CenbrJCitJ ·!M-il91 Car roll Baker ,, "SWEET BODY OF DEBORAH " Also Ill "SWEDISH FLY GIRLS" ~ • (~Q) "HOSPITAL" ...... AND . "MAllY QUIEN OF ICOTS" Co11tl11110111 S111H1er $ll11w 1:00 P.M, ----·-=-11". STADIUM " I . ' ~ .... 11:: •• :---- ---__ .. r_. STADIUM . 2 ···' ' .-.:!l<.~i:-::.~ --- --.. 11"• STADIUM •3 .,, '--!..,,'U E-~ ---~11", SrnDIUM ·! ,_._._.,r::...-;~ '" 1---AND "WHERE'S POPPA" V'nt111 R911tr1v1 <ii-• J1dlJ011 "MAR Y. OIJEEN OF SCOTS" "'WUTHERING HEl<OHTS" E•CIUii~• Or•"9t County R~rvlHI !kit E11qa,tmenl Nlmln1led "' I Ac1dtmy Aw•rdJ t "P:IOOLER ON THIE ROOF" Ac•dtmy Aw1n1 Wlnnl'r J111t Fond1 "KlUTl" I ll) llM "SUMMEll OF 'It'" (I) "CHAfO'S LANO': & "DOC" Slilrrint P:•Yt Dun1w1y "M,t,RK OF THIE DEVIL" "LeT·s IC•RE JESSICA TO OE.I.TH" "SW l!i OISH l'l'I' GIRLS"' '"' "SWEET IOD'I' 0' OlEIOlt.1.14"' "KLUTE " (R) 1---AND "'-''""' •f '42" (.) Op!'rl Oa•I\ b J(I p (11 • s,.,t "''' ,.. l1 nl<d.J•~ l lll v ltl '1.1:ht1ng, costumes . makeu p, be held June 12. and oprn and theater management. he rcgi.stration for others JunP l:l . said . I~ and 16. Classes 11·ill in ert Registration fc:-continuing ~tonday through Friday froo1 day and evening students will 6:30 to 10:30 p.1n. June 19 be held evening students 1rill through August 11. HIWl'Olr l f Aei-t -•• !lie ...... .. •• l•~•I••• liJ• l•I• •• 0 1. l·•l~O ENDS NE XT TUES. Al10 J ames Coburn Jenn ifer O'N ~ill "THE CAREY TREATMENT" "THE FRENCH CONN ECTION" !RI STARTS WEDNESDAY EXCLUSIVE "SKYJACKED" I ~ "eme com ""'""*' ~nw rr. I ~ I r '\ ..,,_' ·~· ''>' . ' Mond•y, May 22. l!J72 ' DAILY PILOT JZ Cav ett's Shaky Are Talk Shows Losing Clout? By CYNTHIA LOWRY They disappeared beeaµse by t\E\V YORK (AP\ -Dick that time 'Today' was en• Cave!t's show is on three trenched 1v11h it s aud ience. It months probation at ABC, 11•a:r; hard 10 fight 11.·• David f'rost 11 ill drop his syn. The s:une p:ttl l'rn . he d1t\atf'd series in 1nidsun111R bel1e1·r"-. 1s n1:iking the other In f:u·or of lu s \\"f'f'kl y ri•(·ue ~t cif the hrfladcasllni;: day a 11nd oct·asional sprcials. Does b a t 1 I t' ~ r o u n d 1101\". The Hus 1nean the nightl irne talk '"lvrught" shv1v on NBC shOI\' is an en d a n gr r e d hrrarne popular \\"Ith Strl'e leler ision sp<>ci es" Opion1on ;unong 1he experts I.~ spl it, but 1hr ronsensus see111s 10 llf' that the problen1 faC'ed by 1hcse tY."o and some olhers i.~ n1orl' !h;lt of supply :i nd rternand lh;-111 !hf' quality of talk . •·t think there is a parallel in NBC"s rxperience yrnrs ago 11·i th th(' "l'odal'" shO\\'." said a nrl1\ork i•xecu0tivr ll'h(l asked (nr :1non1·111ilr. "Th<'rl' hHd hern notliini!"!ikr that in thr 1nornin~ "hen the s ho 1v . started. It c;1ught 011 \\'11h the publil' and the advt•rt1sers . Thrn ("BS can1e along and thrr11· in son1e competit ion - .J:ic•k Paar and Ernie Kovacs. Al len and y,·enl on to be the runs! IAlked-ubout shnv,. on the atr during !hf' .lal'k Panr day. i\10\\' it has nailed do11·n a big and apparent]~· unn1ovahle au· dienre y,·ith Johnnv (.'arsnn. "1'herr hns tJt.en lnts of cornpetilion," the f'Xrcut ive cnntlnued. '"1\B(' trird with Jerr.v Le1vis and Jo1•.v Bi <:hop brfore Cavetl . {'BS hnd ~·1erv (;riffin. 'fhe truth is that 1hrre are just n r crlain nurnber of 'f\' srts thnt slay on in the late Cl'enini;. \\lhrn loo many ~ho11•s rompt'te for the same :1udirnt•e, and for the ad· vrrt i.<;ers· dollars. il is a setup for financia l di saster -for the ne!works and for their af- fil i:ites." ~~~~ AT NEWPORT TIM~Al UENA p RK 11:30 . 3:>0 . 7:00 · io P.M. 7:00 And 10 : 15 P.M. lii\llllJmJl111 "THI !UR'S llRST RIAll 1 SITISllJllG, 116 COllHCIAL. AlllRICAN lllll. ONE OF THI MOST BRUTAL ANO llOYIMI CHRONICLES Of AMERICAN Liff EVER DISIGNIO WITHIN THI LIMITS OF POPULAR INTIRU INlllNT." -Vincenl Canb_y. Ne w York Times '"THI GODFATHER ' IS A SPtCTACULAR 10111, ONE Of THI FINEST GANGSTER JllOltlS EVER IJAO!l ". ... .. . . . ........... . • COAST HWY . .-r MAC.-RlHUll llVO. • NEWPORT BEACH • 644-0 760 • R 11 11 •1(111 ~ ..... 1• ......... 1 ........ •t -..... • ., .. , r .. ,., ,. OPENS WEDNESDAY MAY 24 • ' •. I LEGAL NOTICE ltloney's Worth f11CTn1ovs sn1 ... ss N.t.MI STATIMllfT .,,,. , .. loWI... ,.,.,.,,. .,. *"" kiJllftt 11; HfWl>Olt T MAH4Gl!MENT COM· ,ANV, JJe1 IAICl'lflton Drl\lt, Mt~ • M<l'I. C1Ufotnl1 Gal Employes: T1.•1JrClft GtM1'"11, C.Ot'°'tllooo. llU W1U ..... ""'' Sect-hi. c.Jlforl\11 (C1Htot11l1 COrpwlllonl S'"r••·''' Co t1>or1l l1 n, noJ Yl .. llfllnllt• A v 1 n11 1 , 11.'tttmlr»!tr, Ctlllorn;1 (C&Ut0tnl1 COl'POrt llOlll TMo OUllnn • •I CondllCled by 1 Umllta ,1r1n,rU.1P. Myths, Realities lh : !ll!llltA.ilA COJIPOllATION • DIJ•VM D. Cllrltlfnttn Preti at rt By SYLVIA PORTER Trlj ' lllltmtM Wit llltd Wiii\ lht (DUii• tv Clttk ot 011n91 COYnly on April 21, 1,,,, t . Irle 01v1, AlifN!ly II LIW .... Wlllllltl tlulfVltlll ... _ .. TtltRMM HJ/UWJU -,.,,.» LEGAL N011CE l'ubtltlled Or•M~ (O&tl D•ltv l'llOI,' ------------- Not long ngo, a young ac- quaintance who works in a prlvatt! employment service and who is compensated ac- cording to the number of job3 he ls actually able kl fill, REALITY : The absen1eelsm rate due to Illness or injury currently averages 5.2 days a ytar for women, 5.1 days for men. Moreover, these figures Ignore the fact that relatively few \\'Omen lvork in high managerial positions which always have been associated \\.'ilh IO\\'er absenteeism rate!'!, and thus they may b e distorted. M.tY I. l. U, 2~. 1111 l!J1•'11· rect.lved from an employer a ;:::c._c.;__::c:;;_c. _______ I • 1tn. NOTICl! TO Cl.IOITOllJ OP' IULK TllAHSPlll ANO NOTICIE Ofl lH• TEH'>EO Tlt.f.N~fllll 011 LIQUOll LICENSE Oft LICINSI!$ LEGAL NOTICE . . Na'tlCI T1l ClllDITOllS NOTICE 1S HE AEIY GIVEN lo Ille lUl'l!:r1011 COUllT ... THI! Crfdl!Otl ol F'•fCI J. M<8rkk 11111 Den M, STATI 0, CAll,.OltNIA •O• SHvtrM:i Socr1t ~ur!I~ No. 51'-~14'11 request for the folio"·· Ing: f\1echan-. TMI COllNTT o" OllANOI ""' )6.,1}.fOlj, r1w.cl1Yt lY, 1•1111/eror Nt. A·JJUI tfld Uc~-. wl'ooH bu1lnt'1 1ddrfl1 11 El!llt fl! OAVID CAllEOY <Hl/J..AN. :UO Etit 17th .\1r..i, 111 Ille CHV ol Co1l1 Dt<.,.MO. """''· covmy or Ottntt. s11r1 ot HOT IC.E IS HEREBY GIVEN lo !ht Ctlllorni., 1n1t 1 llulk 11tn•ltr. 11 t lKlul ntctlH1r1 of Int t flov• Nmlld dte-nl ro be mMle to s1eon..i It, Slm1Y10tt1 tnd ll'ltl all "'111111 ht vlnt (ltlml 1t1ln1I Int Plni<v Nincy SJmmc1t11, Sotl•I SKutJrv u ld t!Kt'llen! •r• rHU lrtd to fllt lllt•rt, No. y1.n4su ll'ld J5\ .... J2U. rt1-.. W'ltl! lllt M<H1t•v -Clltt1. In ll'lt ctlltt tlvtl'f. Tr1n1i.1tt • ...., t n rt n d t G ot Ille c!trk of !ht 1bov1 .,.titled c1111r!, er Trlnlltrtt. wl!olt b!J>IMtl 1ddrtu 11 to ~•tMnt t11rm, wltll mr nec:tntrv IQll20 Atbvry, In Ille Clty 01 Sttnron, COllll· ...xntr1, lo tllt llrtd ... 1ltntd 1! ?3 Pirk IV c:;I O••ntt. Sltlt c:;! Ctlllornlt totlO. .t.1tn1tt, L.ttunt 8r1c.h, C•llto1n,1 t:it5I, llle properly II cltscrlbtd In gtMrtl 10: """k:h 1~ t111 Pltct o1 b\/1ll'ltn or 1111 , l.lflllfftltned In tit m•!!~•I p11tt!nlnt to All 1lock In lredt, lhr111r11. ~q11,pm1nl uld fhl tillll cl ltld oectot~!. wi thin tour OOOd will of I (trltln 1Mt1.ln1u k"'°wn •~ monlllt 1rt1r lht nr11 p11ollclllon cf !Ill• Hllltr1n 54u1rt Ll<1uor1 •rid lottlttl •I 150 oil e111 111n Slrtrt In 1h1 Cl!y of Cout "0~r·0 M 1 1911 Mt11. coun1v of or1n11e, s1ate o1 •1 MA~IA,JANf GIL/AAN Ct!l!ornlt, Ind lrtn1J1r !ht ltl!owlnt EltCul1I~ ol 11 .. w.11 tlCOhtllc bl'VtflOt Ileen~ 0 , ,_ 5 I It f>I 1,.1 tl>ovt nimtd dtc:f(jtnl G4'ntftl Number 11.J:l06Cl, now luu..i ro WIL\.IAM M WILCOXliN ortm•t•t l!Kllecl II 250 E.11t 1711\ $1rNt. Hi I> rk Avtnui (011• Mt11 lcr Ill• P•e'"IHI loxa!td IT L~ aiicll, Cllllornll ttUI lill 1!:011 11111 Slrttl In Ille City ol (c111 T,.1 111•1 '"''"J Me11, Covntv of Or•n1~. .St11t ot Alllll'MY /ctr ••tcu"I• C11Uorn\1. ,llMlit>H Oringt c011r 01/ly 'lie!. Tluit the •mount ol p11rch11t pr\c t er M•Y •· u. n, 2'. 1'71 111t.n con1ldtr1tlcn In connKllon w/111 uild -'------------1 lraniftr ol uld llctnMI tnd 11!d bu1lnt11. LEGAL NOTICE ln<!l.ldlnt Ille t1llm11td lnvtnrorv, 11 rl>t 1um cl 11l,llXl.oo. Wl'llch con11i11 01 1111 -------------I lollowlno' C11Kk1 -<:itf!'O$lltd by $lmmon1 l'ICTITIOUS llUSINlll -tmperltl 8tnk, .<vi.lleim. t 1.000.00 '9,DOCl.00 NAME STATIMINT Acer. No. Clol-Jtl"32 ; Tiit IQlloWlnt NrtOl'll trt do!n1 Promlnory nolt.I -,,..,n.inttrtsl . buth•t'S •·.: 11t1rl119 Proml11ory Nole EXECUTIVE OFFICE, S.I 5tn Nico-pty1!11t 11'1 tscrow 111 Or., Ntwport lta<:ll '1UO. Nolf MCur..i by S..CUrl!y Mrt. Ptttlcl~ Jttn lrtnc:tc. 1t.ll2 Aorttmtnl 13.000 DO ~a<:tlo Drl~•. 1Atu1on Vl1kt. Ctll!ornlt. Alt Oll'l•r builneu ntm•• 1no llklre1~, MrL Ktrlwyn Marlt Wllttl. 11IJI Lt ulld tw 11\t Trinsltror wllllln "''" v11rs Lima, Founllln V1ll1v, C1lllornl1. 11rt Ptll '° ltr 11 known lo "'' Tiiis butlntn It btln1 coodu<ltd by I Trintlfttt art: Gtn1r1I ~1r1,..rJnl,, RANCHO LtCUORS. ,112 Wtllmlnutr K1t11rvn M. Wtlltl Avtn~. Wt11mln11er, Calllornl1. , Thl1 1tll....,1nt Fllld wllfl !ht Counrv Th~t 11 1111 btt" 1gretd betwttn 11ld . Cltrk ot Or111111 Counr., o.n MIY 11 . itn. llctn..-Ind lnttn(lt!I trtnslertt 11 rt-:ttv ltvtrly J. ~o~. DtPulv County oulrlod bv Ste. 2401• of the 8u1ln~u •nd . Cl1rk. p 117.._ Ptoftulom. Coelt. 11\11 lht contld trlllon • !or fhl trtl'lfftr ot ••Id bu1lnts1 .11111 · Pllbl!1tlld Or1ng1 CN1t 01Uy ~llOI. 111n1lf'r of ••Id flctnst 11 10 b~ p1ld onlv -Mty U. 12, 7f tl!d Junt J, 1'12 lOJl·12 tfltr 11ld lrtnJftr he• b«n 1pprovld by LEGAL NOTICE • ••Id o.p1rtl'!\lnt ot Altot>ollt 11v1r&M> Centror. f'ICTITIOtJI •VSINllS NAMI ITATIMINT Thal 1 lilt, lr1n1f1r 1nd 1u1t11mtn1 of the 1for111IO stock ln lrtdt, lflttur11, 1<Nlt1met1t 1r>d 9ocd will 01 Jlld bui!neH wl!I bl mtdt, tnd lht t0n•ldtr1tlon Tiit lollowlnt ""°"' 1r1 dolnt lhlr•,or ,_lhtr with rht ton1IOf!r1tlon bu1lntH 11: lor It'll trin1ltr 1nd 1nl1nmtnt ol !ht LA ltEMUDA SADOLEll:Y, 7:115 E t1or111!d Uttl'IU 11 lo bl e0111umm11td on Co111 HlthWt'f, Coront dtl Mor, fl,lJ. or tfllr 1111 nlnlh dtY ot June. 1911. ti !ht . 0.nltl Joupll $pr1t1. nt2 Oownln1 H<row df'l)trlmtnl of Tiii fltnk GI , Cir .. W11tm!n111r. 1 ... , '" c • . And., Pllrlck RGmtro, nt1 Downlno C1llf0!'"11. N. "" • ..,,. v ( en tr . Cir., Wtilmlnlltr. Drive W111, ln tilt CllY of S1nl1 An1, -T1111 IM.lslntts )1 Mint conductld by 1 Covn!y of Or1n~e. $11!1 of CoUfornl•, · Gtntrll Ptrlntr.rilp. Prollkl td lh1I lhl DilP••lmtnl ol Alcoholk • D.t.Nl!:L J SPlt.1.TT fttvtr•~t Cc"1ror 1111 lpProvtd tfld Thli sltll~nt f11td with tllt Counly lrtnlfer ot 11kl llcen~t. 0 Otltd M1¥ 10, 19n Cltr k al r1n11t C1111nrv on; M1v n, lfll. FRED J 11oce1t1De l y .4.rthur E. 1<11111r, Dtwtr Coun1v T•tl'l•ftrOr 1n11 LlttnHt Cltrk. OON M. SILVERNAIL P 1177' Tr.tn1ltror Ind Lktnset Pub!lll\ed Or1ntt Coe1t Dtlly Piro STEPHEN R. $1MMONS M1y n. 2', tnd' J11111 J, 12, ltn lllf·n TrintlirH 1nc1 rnttndtd Trtntlttff LEGAL NOTICE PINKY NANCY .SIMMONS Trtn1ltrM tlld lnltndtd TrtnJftree ~ubllshed Ortrttt Cotst Di lly P1101, NOTICI INVITING •IDI M•Y :12, l'n lllf.12 cal engineer s p eciali.zing in nuid COD· trol devices -e.g., heat e x changes, ~011TI!• c en trifugal pumps, valves, fluid mixers and separators; substantial salary for the qualified person. But there was a catch. The e111ploye had to be a \voman. Allhough sure that a search \VOuld be fruttless, the young 1nan nevertheless called his flr1n's Chicago office. \Vithin minutes, this office produced the names of six ellgible lady candidates and one was promptly hired for this job. You're in the majority if you never ":ould have considered an engineering specialty in "fluid control devices" a \\'Oma n's job. You are also in the majo1·ity if you continue to indulge in unfair, illegal "job labeling" which arbitrarily in- sists that one occupaton is for men only and another for women only . Aptitude tests, though , have repeatedly shown lhat \vomen can perform just about any -job a!'I well as men can. \Vomen are now represented in .virtually every one of the 400.plus occupations listed iii the 1970 census. Yet, in de· fiance of all equal opportunity laws, job labeling persists-and it continues to bar women from the higher le\·el. higher paying jobs. llere, in addition to the "\vomen's jobs" myth. are other n1yths "'·hich mock this era of equal job rights. P.fYTll: \Vomen are absent from their jobs because of ill· ness more than men are, thus ('()St lhe employer m o r e N01!t1 Jt l'•t1111V 1lvtn !hat the loerd ol TruJlttl of '"' Co.ti (ornmunllv Ccll111t LEGAL NOTICE mone". Dltlrlct ot Ortnot Counly, C1tlkwnl1, wlUo '----:---:--:--:--:-:---· ,_....:::::'.'.:::'.'.:....---,,-,-.,,,---• rKtJve Jet/I'd bl1H up to 1:00 11.m., Tut1·f , Cltv. Mt~ :.O. 1t11, 11 tht P1trth11i"I lflCTITIOUS •USINl!:IS LEGAL NOTICE . Cltnt. Gf 11ld 1cr-1 dlllrlu IOC:•ltd II NAME STATliMliNT • 1110 Ad1m1 Avtnut, Cotll Mt11, Tht lcllowlnt Nrton Is oolnt bus!nen NOTICI 01" INTl!:NTION TO ENGAGE • Ctlllornl1, ,, which llmt UIO bkl1 will bt IJ: N T IE SALE • Publl<IV 0911\1d tnd rttd tor· NEW OR MOOULECTRIC SYSTEMS, 1'10 El$1 I H : USED PARKING LOT POLE LIGHTS. Wtlnul, fulltrlcn , C11llorn!1 OF ALtOHOLIC •EVl!llAGIS l All •• t be 1 h 5urt Slcp M1nu11clurln<1, Inc.. 1 Ml'f 11, 191 -I ,,. " " tCCOIClll'l(t WI! C•!l•ornlt corPOretlon. 1~10 EI 1 l TO WHOM IT MAY CONCEllN : lht ln1trut1lon1 and Condlrlen1 •nd Wllnut, Fulltrlon. C1tll!ornlt Sublect 10 111u1nct GI !he 1.cense 111-~!11<1110111 whlth trt now on fllt Incl This butlneu ii conducttd by 1 tor. 11Utd tor, notice 11 htrtbv given 11111 1ht ,.,,.,. bl 1.cur..i In 1111 offlc1 GI ll'lt POrttlo uncltfllt~ ProPOt•1 to 1111 1k0hcllc Purcll111n1 A11nt ol 11ld Kllool dl11rrc1. nE. A. IETTIN, 111vtriat1 11 1111 prtmli..1, dtscrlbtd 11 .Etch bidder mull 1ubmlt with hi• bid • Aut S•crtterr 1on1w1· ''".'lt•'• dltoek, <tr1111td cltetk, or bid· ThlJ .iittfntnl w11 tlltcl wll~ th1 coun· 111.5 w. Vlclorlt SI'. llld1 IC & L, Co1T1 Cltr I bond m1ae 111v1bl1 lo Ille ordtr ol Iv Cltrk ot Ortnte Coun!~ on APrll 27, Mitt, Ctlllornlt. '"' Co111 Commuri11v ColltOI Dt1lrkl 1n1. P~rsutnl to iuch roitnlla.n, I~• un. 'l'o.rd Of Tru1ttt1 In tn amount not ltH m.oc: derslonecl 11 1pplvln1 10 the OtP1rtmen! ln.1n llvt "'''"' (J%1of ll'lt1um·bld 11 Titlmtt M. Otl"Clf'lll, Ally. o1 Alcdiollc 1ev1r1" Control for 111u1nct • 1u1r1nltt tllll lflt bhldtr w!ll enltr Into ... Nttttl lilOU!fttl<il l tvd. ol on tlcOhcll< btver101 l!Ctn1"! lor tlltse Int PfOPOted Conlrtct II Tiit 11m1 11 ,11111t111, Clllf«nll '"" prtmlan It lollawt: 1w1rdfd lo him. In Int lvtflf ol t1Uur1 lo F1704 ON 5ALE llEER ,:Oltr Into lu<h conlrtd, 1111 PfOtffCti of Publllhl'd Or1n11 Co11f Dtitv Pllor, 5TOCICHAM. l<tnMtTh W. ,,.. d'll<k .... 111 bt hlrltltlCI . .,. 111 !ht ti•~ M•v I.,, lS, 11, ''11 1n .. n Publlllltd Ortntt Co.it OtllV Pilo!, ·'' • bend. tltt lull 1um lllt•tol wlH bt Miv 21, 1971 1:U0.1l lorfflltd 10 11111 schoot 11111r1c1. LEGAL NOTJCg No bllldtr mty wlttldrtw ~It bid lot I LEGAL NOTICE pi:rlod cf lorlf·llvt UJ) dlfl lfllr 11iel•rn«,•O.mii<C."";;o;"''l---~~~~~~~~---I d.l!t .... for !ht -n1111 tlltrtOI, INOTICI! TO DICL.Altl! CANOICACY The llotro cl lruUNt ftltrvtl tht POil SCHOOL OISTlllCT GOVEllNtNG l'ICTITIOUI IUS1Nl!SS prlvlhrtt al rtlocll1111 tnv '"° tll ttlO'I or •O.t.110 MEMll!ll ELECTION TO IE H.t.Mli IT.l.TIMlNT lo WllVI 1nv 1,,etul1rnl11 or 111· HELD IN THI! NEWPOllT·MEIA The lollowllll PtflOn 11 oolnt bu1lnt11 torm1llllt1 In tn'f bid Cf In lht bidding, UNIPIED SCHOOL DISTllCT 11; 0Ptn: Mty JO, 1•11·1:00 p,m, NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN TO ALL INCOGNI TO NO. It, 301 M1rlnt No. 7. NOllMAN E. WATSON CUALIFIEO PEllSONS !kif In 1ltcl1on llllboa l1l11!d n660 5K1y, ec1rd er Truillf'I will Ill htld In the NtwPOrl·M111 U"llltd 5h1r011 A. White, 19UI 1•1h Street, Ar>t. Publl111td Ort"9f Coe11 Otllf Pllol School 011rr1u, Covnl'f GI Or1rt111. S11h L. 316, NrwPOrl Be1ch M•v 15. l'J, 1911 11,1.1f of Ctllrornl1. on lhe ei1111n dav 01 Au;1111, lhl1 bu1lnr1s II btlno to11dueieo bv tn -'-"'-.C..-'-'------C:::C.::jnn, lor tt.e Pll•POJt GI elrctlnt rwo lndlvldu•I. L•'GAL NOTI membtrt 10 11+1 lht v1c1nclr1 In tru1Jtt Sn•ron A. Whlll "' CE 1r111 No. 5 Incl No. 6 on the tovtrnln1 Tiii• 111t1mtnl fllrd wl!ll th• Counl'f ---"°'==ccc~-cc---1 bo.lrd ol '•Id Khoo! dillllct. !.tld Cltrk of Orange County on: A.Prll 17, 1912. FICTITIOUS IUSINl!SS membe•1 le s~rvt durlno the r1m1lnC1tr Iv lltvtrlf J. M10dc~. D.puty Ccyn!y NAM! ST.l.Tl!MINT cf the 11rm1 In wnlch tht ~1cancltJ hevt C!trk. The lollcwlnt oerion 11 Clclno bus1n1.s oc:cvrrtd. FU12S 11; Fermi lo• decl1,!nt ttndldlc'f 1nd lor Publltll .. d 0•1ntt ""°'st OlllY Piiot, Wil.TSON LINE 0 Iv E II s IF 1 E 0 !ht nomln1Hon ol (lndldll!I fer !he tit(< MIY I, I, lJ, 11. lt1f 1121-n SEii.ViCES UNLIMITED, :l1~ Pro1Pt{! lion are 1v1U~blt !rOM l~t ollkt ol ll'tt SI .. NtWPOrl Bra<:h t1HO. Rttl1!rar ol Vnler~ ti 111t Ettl Chettnu!, LEGAL NOTICE Alfltlln A, Wll1on, JIO Pro1p1t!, S1n11 An1. C1tifornl1. ' ___ ..:.:::_::_:::::___::_.:__:: ____ , Ntwper! llt•ch t2660. Ot<l1r1llon 01 Ctnc!ld1cv 1nd nom1n1-'" Tnl1 bu1ln111 11 b•lnt conClwtl!d bv an lloni by 1,,.,n10,5 muit ht-llltd wlrh !Mt IAlt ltll lndlvlduel. R'Dlitrir o! llo!eri 11 tha tbovt iOd°•tll NOTIC• TO ClliDlTORS Arntlll A. Wtllon not ltrtr Then 5:00 P.M. on Junt 10, un. 5UPIOR:IOR COUllT 01' THE Tn11 t111tm rnl llltd wltn !h1 Countv Oell'd inls IKOnd dlf al Mty, 1t72, IT.I.TE OP CALl .. OllNIA FOlt Cltrk ol Or.t"Ot Counrv on ii.pr, 21, 1'71 11_ O. HILLMA N, THli COUNTY OF OR.I.NOi: bv Btvtrl~ J, M10Cox, OtP\llY (oun11 Dtl!lJIV H1 . .l.•11m C!tr-. Et11t1 of PAUL A. BERNT, Dtcrt.wel. ,174n Or;inot County SuHrlnlendtnl NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to lllt or Schccli Publlttie<i O••nD• Ca11I Dtl!Y Ptlo•. Publlsl'tfd 0,,091 Coeil Otlly Pllol. <rtdltcr1 cl lllt 1bcwe n1ml'd drcedtnl ,.,,.,. 1, I. 15. l2. 1t12 110.·12 Mey 1 u, 12, 1tn 1111.71 11!1! 1H ..-r1cnt htvlnv <1tlm1 1oalnu the • 11ld 01cedtn1 ire rfClU l•ttl lo 1111 llltm. Single y,·omen, on average. are absent from their jobs 3.9 days a year against 4.3 days for men. And \\'Omen aged 60 and over, according to a U.S . Civil Ser v I c e Commission study, also have I ow e r absenteeism rates lhan men in th.is age bracket. f\tYTll: \Vomen switch jobs much more frequently than men do. REALITY: Labor Depart- ment studies show t h a t women's job changing rates are just slightly higher than rates for men . And men are more likely to change oc· cupations than \\'Omen. P.IYTH : Jn lhis high unemployment period, \\'omen are taking jobs away from men , the tradilionnl breadwin· ners. REALITY: Jn 1971, an average or 18.S million mar- ried women were in the labor force against an average of 3 million unemployed m e n • Thus, if all these married \VOmen quit and if all the unemployed men moved into their emply jobs. there would remain 15.S million unfilled jobs-causing one of the most horrendous economic disasters imaginable. \Yhal's more, fe\Y of today's unemployed men have the education, skills or other qualifical ions to fill jobs held by women as secretaries, nurses, school teachers. l\JYTir: Women tor "pin money." \Vork only REALITY: Of the 33 million women now in the labor force, nearly half are w o r k i n g because they are s i n g I e • widow~d. divorced, separated or ha\'e very low·income husbands. l\IYTH: Training \YOmen is a waste of money since they quit when they marry or have children. REALITY : The separations are only temporary. Even tak· ing into account her child· rearing, non. working years. the average woman \VOrker has a "·ork lire expectancy or 25 years. For a single woman, the average is 45 years vs. an overall average of 43 years fo~ men, married or single. l\IYTH : l\len don't \~1ork for \\'omen. like to REALITY: Notes t h e Department 0£ L a b o r ' s Women's Bureau: ''flilost men '''ho complain about women supervisors have n e v er worked for a \\'Oman." And a study reported a fe,, years back in the Harvard Business Review disclosed that a clear majority of 59 percent of the men canvassed did not dO\\'TI· grade u·on1en managers or supervisors. Sex, Soul ~ F: mance Necessary -Hodgson :1 B1~ief s Ii By JOUN CUN~'IFF A~ •uN11ttt AllaiflC NEW YORK -Wluit is lhe meaning ol thla word ''produc· Uvity'' which, we are told , must conUnue to rise if workers are to make more real dollars, companies make bigger profits and everyone improve his standard of liv- ing~ As President Nixon said in a Labor Day message last year, "it sowlds like the old speedup or some new er. flclency system that drives people harder." IT IS HARDLY that, bul convincing the reno,v who pushes a wheelbarrow 1s another thing. He may really believe that it can only mean harder work for him and, in effect. a lowering of bis living standard. !\fore realistically, his pro- ductivity would be increased many more times if a tech- nique \~·ere developed that permitted him to sit behilld. a console and dire<:t a machine to do more efficiently the work he once did with his muscles. But selling that notion Is anoth&r thing. As L a b o r Secretary James D. Hodgson said in a speech last week: "Somehow we've got to put some sex or soul into pro- ductivity." The AFlrCJO describes pro- ·ductivity as simply and ade· quately as anyone. lt is, ac- co rding to the H American Federationist," a measure of efficiency in production. "It e x p r e s s e s a relationship bet1o1-·een a result and something required to produce that result." The "something required" isn't just harder \\'Ork. It also involves the ima~inative and efficient use of methods, machines and money as well. Jt is perhaps a responsibility more of management than labor. AS IT HAS so1netimes been put. productivity gains require "smart l\'ork" rather than just Hhard 'vork." Whereas the hum8n being has physical limitations. his mind cao con· ceive machines and methods of almost limitless power. But forget for the moment how you improve productivity, and concentrate on how y o u measure it. Says the Federationisl: The efriciency of a baseball player is measured by comparing the hits he produces with the num· ber of times he comes to bat . . and of an automobile by the number of miles it tra\•els per gallon. "Similarly, ef. ficiency in the factory. the store or the office can be measured by comparing the outout of goods or serviC!Cs \\'ith the number of hours of \\·ork required to produce such goods and services. "THE RESULT is a rate· output per manhour-lvhich indicates ho\\' much can be produced by the labor of one person during one hour." True. But now return to that matter "'·e forgot about for the moment. Productivity must continue to rise if the standard of living is lo grow. That analogy with the ballplayer and the automobile i s , therefore. imperfect. . l. i.i e Wood Expert PORTLAND, Ore. -A !-Oto! or aM.7 million board feet of sortwood logs was exported from Oregon. \Vashlngton, northern California a n d Alaska during .he first quarter of 1972, a U.S. Forest Service report says. David Darr of the Pacific Northwest Forest and Rangel Experiment Station said that amount was down 20. 7 percent from reCord shipments in the previous quarter but up 5.9 percent compared "'Ith export/ volume in the first quarter of 1971. Japan \vas the de stination of 531.6 million board leet -95.l percent of the total. \Vashington and Oregon ex· ported 534.7 million board feet : northern California. 13.4 million board feet, and Alaska, 10.S million board feet. e Shell Closes HOUSTON -Shell Oil Co. is closing regional offices inl' Atlanta, Chicago, and San Francisco as part o! a move to restructure ifs m a r k e t i n g organization. Frank ll. Staub, \•ice presi· dent marketing, said the reorganization will give' greater responsibility a n d authority lo sales districts which will be largely self.con· tained units. , Closing of the Atlanta office tentativ~ly is scheduled by the end of {be year. Staub said the Chicago and San Francisco of-I fices then will be closed as 1 soon after as practicable. e Occidental LOS ANGELES Oc- cidental Petroleum Co r p . reported its earnings had edged back into the profit col· umn for the first quarter of 1972 and that it had developed a battery that could po"·er a mejium-small car for 100 miles without recharging. The Los Angeles.based oil company .said its earnings for the first three months <lf the year fell to $5,600,000, or 2 cents a share, fro m $39,301,000, or 64 cents per share, in the same period ofl· 1971. Sa les and other revenues tn, the 1972 first quarter of $667 million total for lhe first three million exceeded the $640 months of 1971, however. e Sawmill SAN FRANCISCO Potlatch Forests Inc., has an· nounced plans to build a $1.5 million sawmill near the Clo- quet, Minn., pulp and paper mills of its subsidiary, Northwest Paper Co.~ A company spokesman said construction of the mill, which : will be capable or producing ! more than 25 million board feet of studs annually, is due to begin this summer and should be completed late in the year. e HIJD Loa11s LOS ANGELES -The U.S. Department of Housing and UrMn Development (HUD) anounced it will began proc· essing Joans for homes in the Antelope Valley. Raymond Carrasco, HUD area director, also designated a "noise impact area" in the \•a lley. an area where llUO will not make loans for new construction. LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE w:tll lllt ntttutrv v01Kh1r1. In !ht eUlce al tht tltrk Ill the 1bcvt tnllllecl court. or --------------------------Ito prtHnl ll'ltm, with !ht nKtU1ry FICTITIQIJt IUSINl.SS NOT!Clf TO tlllOITOllS VOl/dleri, hi !I'll 11ndtr1lonfel 11 tlte alllca ·NA.Ml. \T.l.TIEMliNT SUPERIOll: COUllT 01' THI of her 11torn..,1: McOWEN. GlllEEN a. T1't follcwlnt Hrtont t•t cle!nt STATE 01" CALIPOllNIA 1'011 SYLVIA. HO Etll cna~men Avffl11t, bu1lntn 11: THE COUNTY 01' 011.t.NOI Or11111tt, C1Utornl1 116'6, wlllcn It lht WHOLE.SALE AUTO l!'XCHANG[, 141 NI. A·12US p!1c1 ol buSlnflt• or Ille uf!dtrJIOl'tld In tit E. 11th Sltttl, ltd1. "(" Co1!1 Mltl.t. [1+•t1 of WESLEY M, ELLIOTT, m1tt1r1 ptrlt1nlno to !Me 11!111 of llld t1 .. t1,11. Ott••~ed. dKecltnl, w!lh!n lour monlh1 tlttr !he ,,ltrlt C. Ktlmb1th, IJ] Covernor NOTICE IS HEllEllY GIVEN 10 lht lir1t ~bllctllon el !hit notl<t. Slr•r•. Co•tt o\\fos1, C1111 .. 9H<i. crl!'dUa11 o! 1ne lbo\11! ntmecl dttfCl4'111 01ttd Ftbru,1ry J, 1911. .t.llrtd C. Ellmort, :10t T01111. 81lbo1 fl'tal 1•1 ptr.i.cn1 htvlnR cl1lm1 1oal"1t !ht OOROTHY FAYE l(VHLMAN P.fVTH : \Vomcn fall apart in a crisis. REALITY : ln the words of Charles 0 . Orth, a career development specialist. in a recent Harvard Busines s Review: "If men are present during a crisis, they expect the women involved to become emotional and falJ apJ1rt - and women often do oblige. But somehow, if men are absent, women usually cope quite well." The ballplayer can continue lo win pay raises ii he just manages to keep his efficiency or batting avera~e at .300 year after year. And nobody ex· peels their automobile to get more miles lo the gallon each year. The announcement!'! were made after Los Angeles Coun- ty and the city of Palmdale agreed to place controls on premature development of the area sWTOunding the proposed Palmdale airport. IJllnd, Catt!., ""''· 1110 decedenl tr. r1<1111ir..i lo ll!t lllem, E11Kulrl1 cf !flt Wiii Of Th!1 bu11neu 11 l'llng tllrldU<ltd bv 1 with the nKtut•Y voutNtr1, In tnt ot!lct 11\t •be~• ntmtd dtctdtnl Gtnwer Ptrlncrsnlp, Ol 1111' (l~r-GI !ht t bove tnlltled court, or McOWIN, Olll!l!N a. SYLVIA f,\f!rlt C. K~lmb•Ch In ore1tn1 11>em, whh 1111 n1e1111rv IM lt•I Ct11pm111 .t.~111 Allred C, Ellmctt "0Uth111. le IM 11ndertl1nld 11 !ht 11f!c1 Or111", C1lllClf'ftl.I '2U6 Thll 1111.,,,tnt llltd wllh !ht cc.,Mv ol 11\cl• •ltorntv, PIYl A.. H111n1. ArtCN'nty Tlh 0141 ~1fl Cl1rk Gr Or1n11 Coun!v on AP•. ,,, !tit 1t L1w, Harbor Ltw lulldlno, 111 Ettl Al*Mye fff 1!11clllrl11 bv Btvtrlr J, M1ddc~. DtPuh Coun!y 11111 StrNI, Cc1!1 Mesi, Ctlltcrnl1, Wl'll(ll '"bolalltd 0.lf!VI Co.11 C11Hy Pllol, Clfrk. IJ lht Pl•<• ol butlntu of lllt ~nc11r11tontd M1y 1. JS, 7J. 2', ttl1 11t1.n f'UOI In 111 mtlltf1 1141rt1l11lnt to 11\f ••II!• °'l-;.:_"'--,-,-.C.C..C. ____ _c.._.:I ,ublhhtd Or•nn Co•JI D111, Pllol, 111a 01cll'Otnt, with tour mon1h• •lttr !ht LEGAL NOTICE Mev l, c. u. n. 1tn. 1101.71 nr11 p.ublk1Hon 01 11111 nollt•. LEGAL NOTICE Olll'd MIV lJ, un WILLIS MELVIN ELLton NOTICI TO ClllOITOIS VER.t.Ll!E ELLIOTT Mc:OCINEL (Sta. •1tl.fl17 u.c.c.1 IU~llllOI COUllT OP TH• (o•Elll'C1ttor1 Of '"' Wiii A. bl.Ilk lr1ntl•r It tboi,11 IO bl mtde. STATI OP (.l.Lll'CllNIA flOll al lltt lbeVt n1mtc1 ftc.edtnl Tiit ntrnu Incl tlliilntU loddrtH•1 o1 Tiit COUNTY OP OltlllN•I f'AUL A, HANHA IM l,._,,Utror '": CASI NUMllll tl-*M "'"'""~ ,, \A.W H ... Dlrt Mllltt Ind Jimmie G. ••tntt, IUMMOHS (MAllll.l.011 Htr .... LAW llllldint l!O E. l1lbol e lvd., ltlbot, C1Utornle. tn rt tlle m1"1"1 01 Pt1n;cner : f lt E•lf 11111 111'111 TM 11.111\ft tM tiu1l11111 t&lr11$!111 ol lHAJION A. l(INCKINElll Ind lll•ll!Olld· CMll MIM, Ctllf, 11'11 lr1rt.1ferw trt: flll: CIOllGE S. ICINCKtNC:ll 1o !flt 11 .. Ttl : 1711) l<l .. lftl L~n" lllt'llllrd Str11tU. 1~ N. it.borlolni: GIOllCI! I. l(.INCIC INE lt .l.llW .. ft ltr C•l•ttV!Ort ,oll>Mlllt PIKt, lot_.,.,,....,_ C•tllornl1. fM 111111~ htl llltd 1 P"l,l!on <OO· Publl~ Or1M1t COIU D.JUy Piiot, All Ollttr liiW,,.,I Nrflff Ind IOCl11!1ff'l; difllflt n.ir mtrrl11t. You m1y 111~ 1 M•v n. :It tnd Jlllll .l 11, ltl't lld·7J UIM bv Ill• llt>1-ftror wlll!ln lllrM ¥t1r~ •11.rt01t1 ,.._It wttllln !hl1'1v 01vJ ot t'ltt ltlf NII .. ltr 11 ,,_,, to thl •11 Vitt thl1 --.it It \frvM on YOU. LEGAL NO'l1CE "'°''"'~ trt: II ,..., ftll " lllt' I wrflltn r•~· N-I MICll 1111'11, _,, dtlt\fll m1¥ bl Tiit loc1llon •1'14 ttntr•I ttscrlPllpl elf Md fM c:wrt l'nlY tnltr t I...,. IUPllllOll COURT OF TM& 1114! Pr-rty lo bl lrtnlttrrH tr1: «Nti.llllftt llllVfldl" M' otfltr oreltrt ITATI OP CALlllOllNIA 4lOI: s.toci: In ffll ... flltur ... ""!tltnlnl 1'11111 dl'rilloft 11 pr0Pt1ty, -••I THI COUMTT OI" Olt.AN't:I ti.ti toM wlM ol t c«ttlt1 _, kt t111• CWtlW 4'11MI "1P"lrt t i· A.O tne bu1lnM1 k-•• Tiit Ctlltv. tlt E. -· ~.;... """Olhlt ;.,It. C"ATIOM ll•!llM •rw .. lalblll, Ctlllotnl•. h INf 1111 . .,-1w court, lt1 11\t "'•ner o1 tile """'°" GI Thi •J.tc•, .,... !tit "'" 011 ., .ittt Ir,.. ....... M\'lu"' ..... GOll:DON LEI! MULLEll., hlnfol'tlr. wflkh, fM blllk trtntftr b to bl CCIII-...., II ,...W, .,.. -If .. M Tl! AL•lllT VALLIN wm1t11t111 M : -W ~ ...... ,.... ... If er Clf'O.r elf 11111 (OUM 'fOV ttl htrffr On Of' tit« May ». lt1! 11 a.I'll! of .. , MfP1 M M ttlile. ell.. to ,,,...., btlw1 till Jufft ~ Arntrkt NT.$A. )JU Vlt Uclo, Olftf _..,IMll 10\ttn• Pl9ldlnt ln Otolrlmtnt I o1 tilt tbow ~ IMcfl, C~fwftlL lta.\LJ • tn!lOtCI Court "' fllt 20th dey er Jvl'f', Dtltd Mu ''• 1tn i.'ILL.IAM •· It. JOHN, 1'12, ti t:1S A,M. .. )fi11 dtY ,.... 11111 ltM lt,.11,. tlrauu. Cltl1t IMrt !o .lllow tlUM, 11 tll'f Y11!J h ...... ""'Y lrtlllf'tf'M Mesa Firm Sales Up Standard-Pacific C o r p . , residenUal building C'Ompany In Costa Mesa earned $1~,247 or 6 cent& per share in the firs\ quamr 1172. This was up over 100 percent lrom the •.398 or 3 ctrrt!'I per share £rom the year before, USUm· Ing full dilution. But productlvlly must rise e.Bch year if "'e fire to improve our lot in life. A n d Americans-in fact 11ll people of the industrialized world-•.Cully expect that to oc- cur. at least in a material sense. AAfERICAN workers still are the world's most ~ ductive. but foreigners are making big gaim, which Is not surprising when you consider the lo¥.'tr b11se from u·hich they are rising-often ~·ith the aid of American know·how. In lhe years 1965-1970. the average aMwtl productivity gain ln Japan was 14.2 perrent, France 6.6, Germany 5.3, ltoly 5.1, Unill!d Kingdom 3.6. In the Untied SLates. most productive of all, the gain wu only 2.t percent. e Sult Wlt11dra11m WS ANGELES -Garrell Corp.. an aircraft engine manufacturer, says North Americar. Rockwell h a s withdrawn a Superior Court suit charging Garrett failed to produce 300 jet engines. Garrett. a subsidiary of Signal Companies 01-Los Angeles, said the companle! cancelled a contract for Gar- rett ATF S turbofan engines In North American's Sabreliner jet. Penne y Co. Income Up J. C. Pe.nne1 Co. lnc.11 ntt lncom• ror the flm quorter rose 11.2 perctnt over the some 11171 porlod. Who Listens To Landers? • SINCE SHE'S ONE OF THE TEN MOST INFLUENTIAL WOMEN IN AMERICA ••• ••• Just About . _..,. • 1 • ' I .\ l Everyone ; Does ~ ' • That's Who You Can 'Listen' to Ann Landers l l • ' ' • • : • • • • • IT,,. .......... ffle "'Iller! ef Gotdon LN MuUtt fOr "'-Htr~rl Mllltr ~ .-11on tf U.Ut Merit V•ltl11. YOUf Tr1n111ror I ~Ml'MJIHI Ml-........ , •• ~Ill ,., bl lflllltd. Jln•ir"" G. 11:111111 tf L1t1r OATECli MIY .. lt11. Tr4<11I.,.,. Rtve:nuea from all sources lntreastd 52 percent l o 18.991,004 u compared lo 1 rest.Jed 15.1199,169 tor the prior year. t The company hi! Increased the number ol development.! under construction and rtported ordtn for new homes up owtr JOO perctnt over the same period last year. And how do you gel Iha! rate to grow faster? By the old mcthocb? If onlv It wt.re that simple, bul It lsn·~ 'Mle reason is that the Unit<d Slates Is ateadily challl!lnR iLa nalure. Since World W1t II the country hll ....., deoemJ>hosWlui the .. ~ Ill! ol goocb 'maU"it_ IP the rroductron or servktt. For the 13 weeks ended April 29 the company h>d net urnings of 119.716,112 ogalrut •11.100.111 wt yeor. Thia amounla lo Del Income per .,..~ ol S5 ..... compared l!llh SI cenll ill lf11, the com- PM1 repcrted. Daily in The .... .... .. W, I. II JOHN. U.Nk OP AM•IKA .-.; C.... ... (Miff CJlrll: Nt!MMI Trat -llYlaip A.1Mldl:ll• NJ ....... •1 Wtfi.t l. ltl'W ~. O. ... ltJI' • IW' ~..... ~ tlt!'l ~ e..ca. Ctll'-"ilt OtMe1 Qttf 0.Jft P'llet, Pl/Wltfltd Oft• C...lt 0.Uf ,.lie!, f'llDlllf'IM o,...,. C..il ID•!l'f' ,riot, .. W MW 4 11, 1tn laW2 M.I' I. Ii. !l. IJ, ttn llff.rl Ml~ 2:. 1t11 liD-n ' l l l . . • • • l • •• : ! I • • . i . l ; . ' • ' " I • • l ! • . ' . ' : l ' I : I .. ' • '. I ' ' ' . • I Who Writes I The Editorials? It's " f•lr question, probably ont of tht most fr9e1uently i11ked about tht ntw1pi1ptr. And tht anawtr at tht DAILY PILOT 11 no ont -no ont per1on, that 11. Edltorlol writing 11 •!Nm effort 1t tho DAILY PILOT. It 11 tho •rt of phr11lng thouahta 10 th1t the finl1htcl .titorlal reprt11nt1 tht news- paper's oplnl0!'1 on n1w1 tvtnt1 and problems of the day. Tht editorials do r,ot express tfit opinions of any ont man. Thi newspaper 1ptak1 with ont voict only after many have bHn htard . Tht voices art heard -loudly and clearly -In the informal atmo1- ph1rt which surrounds tht weekly mHtlngs of tht editorial board. Out of th••• meetings come the foundations on which DAILY PILOT editorl1l1 .,. bullt. At the httd of the editorial board are Robert N. Weed. publisher; Thomas Keevil, editor; and Albert W. Bates, editorial page editor. Other board rritinbtrs are Thomas Mu rphine, managing editor; ~lchard Nall, assistant managing editor; L. Peter Krieg, Newport Beach city editor; and Terry Coville, West Orange County city editor. As they discuss news of the week or of weeks ahead, the talk ranges over topics affecting each of the Oran9e Coast communities the DAILY PILOT serves as well as the state, the nation and the world. There Is • tnre•way test of any topic proposed as the subject for an edltorl1I: l. Is It a topic which merits editorial comment? 2. Wiii the commentary serve the newspaper's readers In terms of their particular Interests? '· Does the newspaper know enough about the topic to make an Intelligent, responslbls comment? Often the third question Is the most difficult to answer. And som• times the answer Is ''no.'' Even after considerable research and fu-rtf1er discusslo;;·~a+· a later editorial board meeting, a topic can be dropped altogether because the newspaper still does not have sufficient knowledge to make a meaningful editorial comment. Discussion in an editorial board meeting can modify the conclusion, shift the emphasis or even reverse the position of the board member who was the original proponent of a certain position and posture the newspaper should assume on a given topic. But who actually. writes the editorials for the DAILY PILOT? The editorial board calls on anv man or woman on the staff -the one most qualified to write on the specific topic selected for comment. A reporter whose assignments have placed him closest to the facts surrounding the editorial topic may write ttie firs.t draft. Most often the original draft is written by on• of the senior editors. And usually even a ''first draft'' represents several rewritings by whom• ever produces It. It wlll be reviewed as many 11 threi times -onct by Editorial Pat• Editor Botos, ogoln by Editor KHvil ond, flnolly by Publisher Weed (where ''th• buck stops,'' as the saying goes) -before It finally reaches the publication stage. Each review usually brings some further editing and ra;flnlng. , Any member of the news tNm with knowledge to contribute on the subiect Is Invited to put forth his best effort. Many voices blend Into one. The editorial speaks In the "stngla voice of tile newspaper. Who wrote it? Tho DAILY PILOT did. Page proof 11 checked In composing room by Albert Bates (left), edltorlel page editor, and ThomH Koevll, editor. It's lut ch1nco to correct typo- graphical errors. -· ' / Though they call It "edit board" for short and It meets in a 1hirt--sleev• atmosphere of informality, the job of the editorial board Is serious -and taken seriously by (left to right) Charles Loos, assistant managing editor; Thomas Keevil, editor; Thomas Murphlne, managing editor; Albert W. Bates, editorial page editor; Robert N. Weed, publisher; Richard P. Nall assistant managing editor; L. Peter Krieg, Newport Beach city editor; and Terry Coville, West Orange County city editor: And Other Good Questions What ii an ed.ltorial? --...-·--·· ·- An editorial is a statement of the newspaper's opinion on a topic It feels Is of interest or concern to its readers. "The fire destroyed the building and three adjacent structures." That's a news story. "The fire could have been prevented if the city council had con· demned the ancient building ... " that's an editorial. Why do you endor se candidates for public office? Many people go to the polls without knowing the candJdates well enough to vote on them -or don't go to the polls at aJI, for the same reason. We feel these readers are open to reasoned suggestions. We know the candidate!: both personally and from their records because we think this is part of our job. We share our special knowledge with our reader~ when we carefully exercise our privilege to 15uggest that a given candidate Is best qualified for the job he seeks. We also are careful to see that our editorial oPi· nioM, expressed on the editorial ·page, do not influence our reporting of the cam· paign -or any other news -in our news columns. ,.,,. .. .., l •. Do your editorial writers have full freedom of their convictions or does somebody tell them what to write? . No staff member Is obliged to write an opinion he does not share. He is respected for his dissent. And dissent is frequent, though not bitter, among the writers and editors who produce the DAILY PILOT editorials. Why do you publish "edltorlals'' l\'hicb disagree "\\·itb your stated position? Often the comments of columnists whose work appears on the editorial page are considered "editorials" by readers . The lop of the editorial page containing "' the editorials Is where the DAILY PILOT states its position. The rest of the page is turned over to readers' comments (let· tfrs and Gloomy Gus ) and to writers and cartoonists "1ith whose views this ne1vspa per may or may not agree. These range from the satirical political com· ment of Art Hoppe to the hard-nosed in· vestigation of Washington bureaucracy by Robert S. Allen and John A. Goldsmith. Their comments are not editorials. But they often .counter-balance ideas ex· pressed in DAILY PILOT iedit.orlals and, thus. give. our readers a more balanced diet of opinions on a given subject. '' Gloomy Gus • ~ ··-Is He OJ!~ .of Us? . ' Without letttr·Writing readers I'd lose my voice. 1J,i. IHl~~·ZIJ Gloomy Gus literally Is the voice of the people. No staff mem~r "writes" the Gloomy Gus 'feature. All of Gus's quotes are contributed by readers -many more than can be printed, in fact. That is not to say that none of the DAILY PILOT'S some 200 employes may not occasionally contribute a Gus quote. After all, they're subscribers too. • ' ~ , • 1 ! • '".·•<jl f • ' .. , ' tq l , ~ . •. ' , I I I Flnol review of Intent end contont of en lmport1nt editorial likely wlll find Publisher Robert N. Weed and Editorlel Pege Editor Bates mHting under plaque on Bates' wall which keeps remind ing them the DAILY PILOT editorial page has hlfh 1t1nd1rds to maintain. Plaque is first place award in California Newspaper Publishers Association competition for IMI. .t..-~~--~~----------------------~~----------------------·---------------' . • J I -- 2@ DAILY· PilOT Monday,, May 22, l '172 Responsible Republicans Can Decide Which One Wins. And lhe Choice is Clear. Andrew Hinshaw. He is a res ponsible, conservative Republican who has be~n a loyal member of the Party since 1956. Hinshaw's record in elective offi ce in Orange ·county has proved he's a man of ability, honesty, and integrity. Hinshaw believe~ you want your views spoken in Congress by a responsible, mature reader. Hinshaw wants lo represent you and your views in Congress. Hinshaw believes your Congress man should support the Party and the President. Hinshaw knows-and he knows you know, too -that your voice and your views have been largely ignored for the past 22 months. The responsibility for failing you belongs to Schmitz. This is the record of failure: In the 91 st Congress, Schmitz opposed Nixon.legislation 61 % of the time, an exceedingly st range record for a Member who lays any claim to be ing in step with his Party's posnion. Dunng this same period, Schml(J voted 29~o of lhe time ' ,.,.~"". ~~. t:' .. "\.,---;~+ ~~ ' ' in agreement with th e I '\ (Ame ricans for Democratic Action} position on legislation. ' In the first session of the 92nd Congress, Schmitz oppo1edJhe eresident-42.5.o/o-of~the time. Of the 115 times he voted against the President, SChmitz prevailed (with Democrats) on ly 12 times. . During the current (second) session of the 92nd Cong ress, Schmitz is disagreeing more than ever. He has opposed.the President's position 85% of the 1ime. And the Party 56% of the lime. His voting record proves conclusively that Schmitz Is not speaking for the great majority of Republicans he was elected to represent 22 months ago. On the record It is clear he speaks for;and advarlces only1 the views of the radical right. Schmitz ls the only Republican Congressman supporllng Ashbrook against Nixon. Schmitz is the man who said of the President's trip to Peking: "I'm only worried that he will come back." Hardly the words of a responsible and mature person. °"* ~ HMWlew IOf Coflgrtu CorrllnittH, LIO)'d Sl°'ker, C.P.A .. Trtuurtr, P.O. BOJt •062, Sanll Ana, C1Jfl0fnla 92702 I / ' r ... ' ~. . . In sharp contr3st. as a responsible, Joyal Republican Andrew Hinshaw has pledged his unqualified support to President Nixon for the President's re-election. Hinshaw Is pledged to support the programs and policies of the Republican Party In • congress. He is a teamplayer. Hinshaw Is pledged to represent you and your views with reason and responsibility in Congress. He has proved by his record in County office that he always keepi his pledges. Hinshaw believes this is the time for responsible Republicans to speak up and say at the ballot box that while we may be consarvallves we have 'had enough of being linked with poliiicaJ radicals. Rt1ponelble Ropubffcom: Yau -.. , H 1trongly ond firmly by voting for tll...-on Juno I. Your vote will tell the world that we are determined lo send the right man to Washington to do the )o5 that responsible Republicans want done for Orange County and the Nation. ' I I I I I June • .... . .. To: Hinshaw for Congress P.O. Box4082, Santa Ana,.Cal ifomia 92702 I want to help Alldy Hinshaw. ere"'Smy clieCk for $5;-S10; _$20;_$50;_$100 . Address~· ______________ _:,:~~ P~M'~·~~~~~~~~~~~-.. ~·:.'.~1 Occupation/Business Address, _______ _;._,_;.;~ I want to work. Call me~----- ------- A Ru f Repflb//c.n HINSHAW WINI will ,.,,,,,._ You In Con11,... I . .. ... .; :· _._ ·:· =~1 ·:~ ' f I I t , NFL Won't Buy Sudden Death NEW YORK_ IAP ) -Having failed to get enough votes to institute sudden death for aU games ending in a tie Na- tional Football League owners go ba~ to the confe~nce table again today and begin taclding another side of the issue. Where the forces behind the 6Udden death movement were aiming at making p tie more exciting by having it plaved to a decision, the forces now massed are ~ming at avoiding a possibility that ®tlld lea\re the NF'L open to ridicule. · All the rules now stand, If the Dallas Cowboys were to flnlsb the season with a J:H recon! while tho Washington Redskins won only one game but tied IJ for a 1413 record. the Redskins not the Qlwboys would be the division cham· plons. Tbe Redsk.lns would be the wiMer on the bas.ls of a l-0 record, the 13 ties oot e<1unting in determining a won-10$1 percentage. That would leave them with a 1.000 percentage~ to .929 for the C»wboys. To guard against the possibWty of such an occurreoce sentiment bu been mow.. ting for a method of altering !be way lies are coonted oo Iha~ under t be circumstanoes~ tho U-1 team would be the division champion. 1be -ta oh change would have tin count one-ball game won, Oll&-half game loet. That would mean that a team with a U-1 record would finish with • blpher percentage than a 1.0.tl team. The big question behind tho Issue is whether the prbne purpose ol a team is Best Play I've Ever Seen, • ~ays Walker of Rader's Stop By GLENN WIDTE 01 Ille OlllY P'llot llllf LOS ANGELE S -Sunday game hero t>oug Rader isn't cerlain why the ~ouston Astros have suddenly become cjivision title contenders and club '1anager Harry Walker doesn't even ?1<:1nl to try and guess the reason for the turnabout whi ch has the Astros in fi rst PJ.ace by six percenatge points over the Dodgers. Rader made the game-saving ca tch on Jim Lefebvre's smash down third base in t}te ninth inning as Houston pulled out a Z.1 victory Sunday before 33,928 Dodger stadium fa ns. • Walker IabeJed the effort the best he's ever seen in 35 years of pro baseball. Coach Salty Pafker echoed the sen· timent. . Maury Wills was anchored at second base with the tying run with one out In Dodgers Slate May n ~·• VI. San Fr1ntl1co 1;1$ p,m. M~v '.':l Ood~ •s VI. ~n Fr1ncl1co 7; o.m. May 24 00dlltfs vi. S.n Fr1ncbc.o 7;J.S p.m. MI Y ts Oper tlllt the ninth when Lefebvre smashed one off third base. Rader dived at the hooking bullet, stopped it, rolled over and then got up to put the tag on Wills. <II "That was the game," Walker said aflerward. "ll he hadn't stopped that Tsbs Keino in 1500 . Liquo,~~-~-~'!_king Ahead ·---·-·· .. ~.-.. After Frustrating Year This was to have been ~farty Liquori'• biggest year. Instead it's become his toughes t and mos t frustrating. This wM to have been one of America's best chances at copping tile Olym pic gold medal in the 1500 meter run, what with Liquor i on the scene boast ing speed, strength and great competitive spirit. ·Instead, Liquori will be on the sidelines, tragically shelved with an in- jury. He waited out the weeks and months since hurting himself last October -hoping he could get ready for tlie Munlch Olympics. But last week a Southern California ~---WHITE WASH .._ ==------ doctor dashed his final ray af hope by sa·;:ng he definitely will not rei..'Over in lll :~ to make Munich. "..:ven if he'd said I am okay arxl could start training again immediately, I don't think there'd be time enough to get ready,". Liquori says. So, Marty will take the honeymoon he didn 't have time for last October and will enjoy the Calirorn ia coast. lle'll also mix a little business with pleasure, trying to determine ·whether he'll train with Bill Toomey and Club West in Santa Barbara or whether he'll make Florida his workout headquarters. "\Vith warm weather I can train and CO!lcentrate." he points aut. ''I hope nert year I might be able to go under 3:50 in th~ mile (Jim Ryun's world record is 3 :~' .!)," Liquori told this colu mn as we w· chcd the DJdgers playing Houston in LA . "I mav go into longer distances after my layoff -I'm not sure yet. I may try the t\\"O mile. three mile or 5,000 meters. If things go "·ell I may be around by the '76 Olympics. •·But it's not good to plan around the Ol ympics. That's what I did this time and that's one reason I think I'll be out so long -I kept thinking of the Olymp ics and trying to run on my Injury, aggra· vating it further instead af letting it heal properly. "t'm not thinkin~ toward 1976. I'll keep goi:~-: a year at a time. Aft er all, it's my whr"e career th at counts -oot just one rac::." Reviewing that career, Liquori feels it ha<; been successful. l[e is especially pleased by three things: (a) winning the NCAA mile three straight years (b) breaking four minutes NEW NICKNAME FOR CAGE ROYALS KANSAS CITY (AP) -The Royals ant dead Long live the King! -or the Baro~. Cro\\ns, Dukes, Regals or River Kings. Those are among the 10 suggestions being subm itted to fans in the Kansas a.. ty and Omaha areas for a new name for the former Cincinnati Royals of the Na- tionaJ Basketball Assoclsllon. I The team moved from ClnclMatl at the close of the 1971-72 seasan and will divide Its heme games between Kansas City and Oma ha next season. as a 17-year-old (c) brealting 2: 10 In the 880 when be first started running. • Liquori says the most exciting race o{ his career was last year in Philadelphia when he dueled Ryun. Liquori was clocked in a lifetime best of 3: f>4:.6. Ryun \Vas credited with a 3:54.8. That race stamped Ma..rf.y as this na· tion's leading 1500 meter bet to unseat Kenya 's Kip Keino as Olymp ic gold medalist. Liquori says Keino is still the man to beat in the Olympics and tabs: Tom Von Ruden as America's premier Jniler at the moment.. ·He predicts a 3:34 will win the Olympic lille. What about · Ryun, who ran 3:57.1 n'!CenUy in the Kansas Relays, then subsequently ran a 4:14.1? "I think that race in Kamas meant more to him than any of the others. If he feels that way in the Olympics, he might be OK." Marty replies. Liquor~ who trained at Wemninster High for a brief time during the summer of 1967, labels this as the toughest year (mentaD y) of his life. Waiting for the doctor's ru!ing was frustrating for him and his young bride, who was his high school sweetheart. "My biggest lesson thls year was to learn to live with frustration," be adds. But he.has learned that lesson and now patiently awaits his return tc the cin- derpalhs. And with a tough competitive spirit to go with his running talents, you figure it woo't be long before he's back on tap. ball, Wills ~d have walked home." Rader says it was one of his better plays and adds that making it felt just as good as hitting the home run which led to the Dodgers' demise Thursday night in extra innings. "It's all part of the game ••. I'd steal home ii I could do that. I'U do anything I can to contribute." Rader has been with the Astros five years and while be says there is no one thing you can put your finger on to ex· plain their rise to prominenei!, he says a few things are related. Biggest, perha~. Ls the acquisition of Lee May and Tommy Helms from Cin- cinnati. "They have played on winners and they come to us with winning attitudes. It's nothing you can point to and say this is it. But the winning fetling is there," Rader says. "No one tnowti exact1y what has made us a 'vinner. But we are deeper in talent than we have been in the pasL We. don't fold when we get two or three runs behind (Houston has won 12 of 19 games this year with ·late inning rallies) '&.!I we did last year. "And our yaunger guys are a year older. Helms is in there making the dou· hie plays we weren't making before. I just hope it's like Utis all year between our two clubs." Rader says he believes the title race will be between the Astros and Dodgers and adds that getting a split in this series was great. Reflecting further an his big play, he says: "I was fortunate he hit a low ball so I could see it all the way. Making the st-op was really just"a reaction ." Tonight the Dodgen host the Giants in the beginning af a three-game series as Tommy John celebrates his 29th bitjbday by p;tchlng against San Francisco's Sam McDowell. The Dodgers ate going fir their ninth straight win aver the Giants. 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CHICAGO'S CHUCK BRINKMAN SLID~S PAST SANDY ALOMAR. to win nr to avoid losing. Proponent& of 1 c:bange feel that tho method now uaed to count u .. places !be emphasis on not lot- Ing. They want It to be on winning. Also on !be agenda ls • proposal to change sudden death in post....son games so that each team gains Possessloa of the ball a specific number of timea. 1be proposal '"'" to guard a,giinst a tram winning on a field goal without tis opponent ever having bad the ball, Slowest Car In '72 Beats Fastest of '71 INDIANAPOLIS (AP ) -Bobby Unser, Peter Revson, Mark Donohue. 1be names are the same. They 're living on the same street for awhile again, although their house numbers have been changed. They are the front-row sitters for Saturoay's 561h rurutlng ol $1 mlllJon Jn. dianapoliJ 506-mile race. Unser has the Pole position, Revson the middle spot and Donohue the outside. Jf it all sounds like a replay of last year, it almost is. For tnat race, it was Revson, Donohue, Unser. The similarity end! there. Unser, who is begiruling to accumulate more speed records than any other driver around, shot the Indianapolis Motor Speedway course recortb out at sight during the first full session of qualifying trials and , taking their cues, everybody else followed. The 38-year~ld Unser, older a! two driving brot.l;iers from Albuquerque, N.M., drove one lap at 196.676 miles per hour and four laps at an averag~ of 195.940 m.p.h. That was 17 mile! per hour over Revson's 1971 reocrds of 179.JM and 171.696, respectively. By Sunday, when every spot In the 33-- car lineup was,filled, each driver who got into the field has threaded his way around the 2'h-mile oval at speeds faster than Revson's old marks. Even the 33rd spot qualifier, 33-ye.ar-old ex-stock car great Cale Yarborough, got in~o the act. His 179.569 top lap and 11). mile average of 178.1164 would have put him on the pole 1rast year. The 33 starters, in fact , beat !be 1971 field average af 171.665 by almost lZ m.p.h. From Bobby Unser through Yarborough, the average is 183.655 m.p.h. Revson, 33, won the middle spot in the front row with a clocking ()f 192.885 m.p.h., while Donohue, driving a McLaren similar to Revson's, got the autside position at 191 .408 m.p.h. Gary Beitenbausen, Marlo Andrettl and Joe Leonard mate up Cbe second row, witb rookies Sam Posey and Swede Savage holding down the third row wllb veteran Johnny Rutherlon!, ·Angels to Face Hunter Tonight OAKLAND -Nolan Ryan Will be alter bis third victory of the season tonight when the California Angels invade the Oakland Collsewn for a game with the Athletics beginning at 8 o'clocl: with Cal· Usb Hunter (:1·2) opposing him. In Cl.icago Sunday, bad luct continued On TV Tonight Channel 5 at 8 to plague Del Rice's crew when Carias May of !be Whlle Sox belted a three-run homer with two away in the bottom of the ninth inning to give the home team a M win and a sweep or the three-game aeries. The victory leaves therWhite Sox a half game in front ol toRight's foe, the Oakland A's. And the Angels continued to hold the bottom position in the American League West, eight games off the pace. Alan Foster (0-1 ) replaced Eddie Fisher on the mound for the Angels in the ninth witb one away and two men on base. Foster retired Ed Hennann on a fly to the outfield before serving May the gopher ball. C.llfenl .. {I) Clliu,. 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He's winning again . And, he warns, he's playing goll beller than ever. "I'm rutting the ball belier now than I was· a year ago," Trevino sald after scor· ing his first victory of the year Sunday in the Memphi> golf classic. "I'm probably hitting it better than J ever have tn my life. "My putting has been of!-but it came back today. I'm gelling It all put togelber again." Trevino bad just flfed a course-record, five-Wlder-par 67 on the dauble tough Colonial Country Club course and won by an easy four strokes at 2811 seven under par. He Interrupted a sleady Dow of one- Jinen, quick comedy shots, fwiny observations to turn· dead serious on two subjects -his rettU'n to winning Corm and his contribution of $5,000 from his purse of $35,000 to the SL Jude's Children's Hospital. "[ know what it Is not to have anything," said Trevino, grandson of a gravedlgger and a product al the Dallas slums. •jThla game has been good to me. 'This Is my way of trying to pay 1<>me of it back. ''I'm not going to Just give my money Fln~I sewn Ind money ""nnlng1 S11nd1y In llMI Mtmp11r1 <>PM: Lee Trivino John Mll'll llt y lier! Wt11.,.r Geclf'ge Hl•on DDuv S.ndtr1 J. C. Srt1d OIYI S!odllon Gibby Gllblrl Bob Olck!Oll Cl'lllC-Cc.irln1y Arnold P11 .... r Ml IO!I R udo I pl! Cftlrlel Coody lob P1yne 81rt YtrlCIY Blf"t Gr11ne J !m Fwrllll Don J1n111ry 0.1111 '""""' Gntrvt" 1Crltld1on Bob M t!l'lt !lobby M!tch1!1 F.o•tnl F1111r Charf" Sifford J1rry McGtt Georv• Archlr Urry Zl1gler Art Wfll Herb Hoosier Allen Miiier Din Sllln Jim Jfmlflon Huber! Grnn Wiii H-lk 80b e . 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JJ.-.2'] 71·1J.7+7+-"1 11., .. , .. ,,_n, ••·•1-7J.71 -2'4 7S.l).17.ff-7tl 71-1•1'-17-7'$ 1 .. 10-1J.1+-m 1+7J.7.S-7l-2tS 11.1s-11-11-m av.'ay to someone on the street. but, you know, there may be 1,000 kids In thaf hospital who will never walk. You can't buy your way in life, bu~ this ii sometb.ing I want to do." . He 's done It before. He's made a major contribution to charily almost every tlme he scored one of his 12 victories, the Ilis t of wh ich came in October. "This means a lot to me," he said of the t!Ue. "l once went 13 months without winning. It starts to hurt. you go for a while witho ut winning and you start to wonder if it's ever gonna come back. it maybe it's all gone ." Padres Jump In Attendance SAN DIEGO (AP) -Fred Nonnan had pitched hLs third shutout in a row, the San Diego Padres had drawn 103,484 paying customers in one week at home and their president, Buzzie Bavasi, could fina lly see daylight. ''1 think we 've turned a earner," he said Sunday after Norman's five-hit, 7..0 masterpiece gave the Padres a split of a doubleheader against Cincinnati ... Ji we can continue to play the way we have lately, we cauld draw a million here thls lie::ison." The Padres, 7-2 victims or Cincinnati r lghthander Gary Nolan In Sunday's opener, have won 10 of their last 17 games under freshman n1anager Don Zimmer. The 17.000 they averaged in attendance ror si x dates last week put them far ahead of the pace they set in 1i71 when they were low in the National League with a draw of 550,000. The sudden fan enthusiasm here has fo1•ndations. The Padres were the first team UJls year to beat such pitchers as Tom Seaver af the-Mets and Steve Carlton -ot Phil adelphia. The Padres ha ve knocked three teams out or first place and, Satur · day night, they snapped Cinclnneti's nine-- game winning streak. "If they stay healthy, they won't rinlsh fn last place again this year." said Ci.D- cinnati manager George ' ' S p ark y '' Anderson after his team managed only 1 split of four weekend games here. M~Lain Bombed • ID Opener BIRMING!IAM, Ala. (AP) -DeMy McLain. lhe r ormer major league superatar who loot his first atart Jn the minors after being demoted from the Oakland Aihleti<S, says be'a not ready to quU baseball -at least not yet. McLain said be was dissppoinled with his minor league dcbul, but attributed It to being In "as poor shape as I've ever been In." "Alier lwo Innings, I died," said McLain. "I am In pretty bod shape. OI coune !l's disappointing, but ti you're uk!J1i me U I'm 101ni to quit, I'm not." When McLain arrived here h< said he expected his stay 1n the South to be a 1hort one. But his first experience for tho Birmingham team Saturday night was anything but oparkll ng. He pve up nine hits, Including three home nms, hit a batter, walked six and threw • wild pitch, •II In fi ve Innings. The Montgomery Rebels woo th< game 9-J and 111 their runs ,..,. off Mcl.oln. He pitched like the McLain of old in the nm Inni ng, and no nms scor<d . fn the 1econd, be got ou1 of trouble aner walk· ing t\\·o batters. But In the thlro , !be bottom !•II out. Tt'!n batters went to the plate u i1antgomery scored five run., on two singles, a double, two walks and back-to- back born e runs by Smokey Robinson •nd former Blnnlngham player l\ e I C l t Sanders. In the fourt h, McLain hit a balt!'I', imied two mare walks. and gave up a single for one run. And In the fif\b, bio l•st inning, h< ~ave up a polr of lin(lel and another Rob!"'°" homer. • '>2 DAILY PILOT Mond1y, ~., 22, 1972 BigCr~ow-d~s-;r;~~--_,,,.~==:z=:.m-=====-==-==~ Area Dis~ns Stando11is Motlier E1icourages Sons See Mets, Tigers Win DETROIT -Mic key Lolich scattered eight hits to win his seventh consecutive game and became the first eighl.game \1:inoer In the America n League u the Detroit Tigers beat the Cleveland Indians S-0 Sunday berore a Bat Day crowd of 52,150. ,,, PHILADELPfllA -The New York fo.fets. held hitless for five innings by Stevt Carlton. careened 10 their 11th straight victory Sunday. beatlng the Philadelphia Phillies 4-3 on two-run homers by Tommie Agee and Willie Jifays. Jim Beauchamp, batting for Seaver, 7~ 1. in the eighth, singled te set up Mays• game-winning homer over the left center field wall before 57,267, the largest crowd ever to see a baseball game in Philadelphia. ,,, JERICHO, Utah -An 18-year~ld motorcycle racer died Sunday after ht fell from his bike and was run over by another contestant in e · cross-country n1otorcycle race 15 miles west of here. Michael Eddy ol Garland, Utah, died in the novice cla!l.'I or the annual Cherry Creek Hare and Hound race, which is sanctioned by tbe American Motorcycle AssoclaUon end the Sportsmen Riders Associa tion. Family Mandate: Win Indy 500 INDIANAPOLIS (AP) -There is I mandate in the Bettenhausen family that one of them must win the Indianapolis 500-mile race. "ri.fy father was killed trying to win it.'' 5aid one of his sons. handsome. soft· spoken Gary Beltenhausen. "There are three boys and we've more or less agr~ed that one ol us is going to accomplish what he tried so long and so hard to do. ")!other not only agrees. she has en· couraged us to develop the talent he left us. \Ve are doing that. on our own and mostly without help from anybody. "Indianapolis is a tradition to the Bet· tenhausens sort of like a second home. For 13 yea;s while Dad was racing in the 500, we spent the month of 1\1a~ at the Speedway. Even as kids, we realized the frustrations the fleeting joys and the ups 11nd dO\VTIS' of the drivers. \Ve could always tell when Dad had a good day. He'd bring us candy. "Then he was killed while clolng another driver a favor. He was always doing favors for other drivers, like ~riv· ing their cars to help them sol ve minor problems. }le was so good that he was always being asked to do that. "On the morning \1-'e left our farm in Tinley Park. 111., to go to the Speedway for the 1961 race, mother made Dad promise he wouldn't get in anybody else's car. o"'ners \Vho have given . me the o~ portunities to drive," he said. ''But I feel like I am a se!fmade driver. By that, I mean tha t nobody tame up to me and said, 'Gary you do it this way,' or 'Gary, could you use a fe\v pointe rs.' '"I a!so feel that I am being recognized now a~ a capable driver. 1\vo year~ ago , I could \li'alk do11.•n Gasoline Alley with A. J . foyt on one side ;ind Mario And_retti on the other. Nobody \\'OU!d recognize mr. No11.·, they do."' Small Town Life Helped Baugh's Son ANDRE\\'S, Tex. (AP) -Famt, as a rule. lasts one generation. After it ki sses the first choice, it grows stale for the next in line. ~1any children of famous people spend much of th eir Jives trylng to escape the unsolicited popularity. Jua b County 8herilf'1 deputies said the arc•-lent oceurred about a half mile from lhs start of the race as 200 contestants fanned out acros.s the desert. DAILY Pll.OT Sti ff Pllti'f CORONA'S HOWARO ROYSTER WENT AFTER THE CIF DISCUS TITLE TOOAY ••• "'But Paul Russo had spent the winter at our farm helping us bu ild a grain cur· ing bin. fie worked his hind legs o_ff help- ing us, particularly with the weldmg. He Being the son or one or pro football's ~realest quarterbacks might have been like that for David Baugh, but the securi· ty of life in a small town helped him develop a remarkable sense of Ur dividuality. In 1943, during Sammy Baugh's prime as . \Vashlng!on Redsklns' quarterback, Da\'id 11.•as bom in Sweetv.'ater. lt was lo be the largest town he would spend any appreciable a1nount of time in until col- lege days in Lubbock. ,,, SAN DIEGO -A flagpole knocked down by a race car struck and killed a 56- year-old engineer as he shielded a child at the South Bay Speedway in 80Uthern San Diego County, track officials said. The victim was identified SUnday as Richard Smith Hathaway. Hathaway was sealed in the_ speedway stands beside a friend's child when a car hit thei>OJe. As It toppled, the man leaned over to protect the chlld and was struck, witnesses said. Hathaway died later at Bay General llo!'r]nl in Chula Vista. ,,, GAROENA -Ed Hale. a Lemon Grove race car driver, remains hospitalized in fa ir condition from injuries suffered when his car flipped end over end at Ascot Park. Attendants at Memorial llospital refus- ed Sunday to comment on the extent of his injuries but said Hale remained in an intensive care unit. Don Hamilton of El Cajon, whose cat al.so was flipped end over end Jn l~ ac- cident Saturday night, was released from the hospital Sunday. ,,, OETROIT -Detroit Tiger outfielder Willie Horton, who has been working on special exerciSes to avoid muscle pulls in his legs, will be out of the lineup at least three weeks because of a muscle pull. fo.1anager Billy Martin said he would confer with general manager Jim C:imr>bell on whether or not the slugging left rielder would be put on the 21~ay <li~o.bled list. But he said it was likely. Horton pulled a muscle in his left thigh while tr.vinf! to beat out a double-plfl.Y ball in the first inning of the Tigers' 5-0 vie· tory over Cleveland. He writhed in pain <ind was carried from the field on a stret· cher. In the same game Horton's replace- ment, Gates Brown. pulled a groin mus· cle in hl.s right leg while stealing second base in the filth . It is Jess serious. although Martin said he didn't know how long he would be sidelined. ,,, SANTA CLARA, Calir. -UC Santa Barbara won ·the first round ol NCAA District 8 baseball playoffs, defeating the University or Santa Clara 6-5 on a tie- hreaking home run. Sanla Barbara. coming from behind after losing Friday's game to win the best-of-three playoffs series Sunday, will l.!1ce the Univer sity of Southern California this weekend for the district 8 cham- pionship. ••• AS OID NEWPORT HARBOR'S TERRY ALBRITTON. ,,, BUFFALO Joe Crozier, interim roach of the Bufralo Sabres for lhe last half or the 1971·72 National llockev League season, has repla ced Punch lmlach as lhe club's permanent coach. lcn.lach relinquished his coaching duties after suffering a heart attack Jan. 7. He vi'ill remain with the club as genera l manager. ,,, WASlllNGTON -Baseball returns to 'Vashington's RFK Stadium tonight when the Pittsburgh Pirates and the Baltimore Orioles clash in an exhibition contest billed as "an eighth World Serles game.'' One other exhibition game is scheduled for Washington later this summer. A capacity crowd of 45.000 is expeet ed to 11.'alch lhe 10th annual Children''I: Hospital benefit C{)ntcst. Ganie time is 7 p,n1. 1t::STJ. ,,, BOULDER, CO io -Barry Schur stole !he show at the Big Eight Conrerence Saturday, but the Kansas sophomore said he wasn't surprised at the 7-foot-3 high jwnp that makes him a sure fire Olympic prospect and put icing on the Jayhawk.s' sixth consecutive title, "I felt J could do better after that 7· footer at Kansas," said the 20-year-old from Tucson. Ariz, "No, I wam't surprfs- rd by my 7.:J." Oklahoma Stal•'• Jim Bolding shared Ure lim•light with Schur, posting the sec· ond best time for an American this year In Y"1Mlng the 4f0.yard lntennedi1le burdJ ... lie .wu clocktd In II.I IOClll1do. Chamberlain, NY Whiz All-star Que stion Mark s UNIONDALE, N.Y. (AP) -Will Chamberlain and Da ve OeBusschere, v.•ho suffered late season injuries, re- mained question marks as handpicked learns from the National Basektball As- sociation meet in their annual All-Star ~ame Thursday night at the Nassau Col· 1seu m. This marks the second playing of the g.:ime. which is sponsored by the players !lS!'iocialions of the ri val leagues over the obj<'tl1ons of sorne O\\'nerS. The µa1ne 11•ill be telev ised over more thnn 100 stations on an independ<?n t ne111.·ork. .. The NBA beat the ABA in the rirst in· ter-league clash a year ago but may be hard-presstd to repeat if the services of Chamberlain and DeBusschere are unavailable. The 1·fOOt·l Chnmberlaln, whose .streni;th un der the boards Jed the Los Angeles Lakers to the NBA cham· plonship, suffered a broken left wrist In- the ne:ii:t-lo-Jast game or the fi9al .round playofla against the New York Knlcks, yet concealed the Injury to play in the deciding game. DtBusschcre, a defensive standout with the Kn.lcks. hurl his hip earlier In the !tries but 1aw limited IC-- lion In tht final game. Without this pair, the NBA can still put a formidable squad on the noor, ipcluding the Lakers' Jerry West, Walt Frazier of the Knlcks, John Havlicek of the Boston Celtics, Connie Hawkins of the Phoenix Suns , Kareem Abdul.Jabbar and Oscar Robertson of the Milwaukee Bucks, all members of the recently named official NBA All-Star team. Bob Lo\'e of the Chicago Bulls and Archie Clark of the Baltimore BulleL~. who were on the second team, also \re expected to be available. The ABA squad will be headed by Artis Gilmore of the Kentucky Colonels, who won dual honors durlng the season as the Most Valuable Player and Rookie of tht Year. Rounding out Ure squad wlll be Rick Barry and Biiiy MelchloMI or th• New York Nets; Willie Wise and Jimmy Jones ot the Utah Stars: JuliUJ Erving of the Virginia Squires, Ralph Slmpeon of the Denver Rockets, Roger Brown of the ln-- dlana Pacers, George Thompson of the Plttaburgn Condors and Don Freeman or the Dallas Chaparrals. Spencer Haywood, Seattle, NBA, and Zelmo Beaty, Utah, ABA. withdrew because of post·se•son operatloos. Ar1n y's Fink To Be Lauded By Texas Finks FINK, Tex. {AP) -When the Texas A&M football team meets Anny in foot· ball Sept. 30, the mayor of Fink lll·ill make the Army quarterback an honorary citlzen. And it is obvious why. The quarterback ls J. Kingsley Fink. The game will be at College Station, and a spokesman for West Point sug- gested that tbe citizenship presentation be made just preeeding the contest. Fink's mayor, Mrs. Patricia Albright, decided on the presentation as soon as she became aware of the quarterback's name. Fink C{)nsists of a few residences and a general store, operated by Mrs. Albright and her hu sband Willard. The store owner always is the mayor. But Willard bowed out and turned the crown over to his wife when they bought the store. Mrs. Albright annually proclaims Na. tional Fink Day and Finks, Funks, Phinques and simple wavers or the v.•ord gather around the store by the hundreds from over the nation to eat cake and drink soda pop., "We call our quarterback 'King Fink,'" said LI. Peter J, \Vevurski of the \Vest Point staff. "As a freshman he picked up eight touchdowns on 71 com· pletions out ol 165 passes. Then as a sophomore he again passed for eight touchdowns, with 68 completions in 157 attempts." Added Wevurski, "He's a cocky quarterback. But with a handle like Fink, what else can you e:ii:pect." "'ns good at that. ~ ''So ""e got to the Speedway and Dad was again the hottest driver around. _He was turning laps two or three miles faster than anybody el se and he already was the odds.,on [a\UlrilP.l<\.win.JhP 90le and the race. "Russo was having problems with his car, and he asked Dad to take it out for a few laps to see if he could find out wh~t was wrong. Until then, Dad had kept his promi se; he hadn't been in a car other than his own for the first time since he hit the Speedway in 1948. "So he figured he 011.·ed Russo a fa\'or because of alt th e \\'Ork he had done for us on the farm . It is history now. Dad had driven Pau\"s car only three laps v.·hen it came apart and he was killed . "l"m not a fatalist. but I think Dad 's ticket was written that day. Otherwise, V.'hO is to say that if Russo had driven the car three more laps, he wouldn't have been killed. At 30 Gary is the oldest of the three Bettenhausen sons. The others are hferle and Tony Jr. All are drivers of promise, the younger two still on the way up and still in the racing bullrings. Gary has arrived. From go-k~ts ~n 1961 to powerful sprint and championship cars the last three years. he is a com- posite of the racing professional. . Cut from the modern mold, he 1s naturally shy. wears his brown hair in the over-the-tore-head, widow 's peak style, dresses fashionably and keeps his weight at a compact 160. He and his second wile, Wavelyn, have three sons, the last two twins . He won the sprint car title in the United States Auto Club ln 1969 and 1971, ranked third in the midget championships in 1967, won a stock car event at In- dianapolis in 1963, and switched to the more powerful championship cars with his eye on Indy. His records show three triumphs in the big cars, aiong with four seconds and something over $200,000 in prize money, Last year he was well up on the money list with $101,715 from championship purses alone. "I owe something to the various car Baseball Standings NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division W L New York 25 7 Pittsburgh 18 12 Chicago 15 15 Philadelphia 15 16 Montreal 13 19 St. Louis 12 21 West Division Houston 19 12 Dodgers 20 13 Cincinnati 18 15 San Diego 15 18 Atlanta 12 20 San Francisco It 25 Sullll•'I"• 1t11urtt; Ntw Yorli; t '°"11Mltrl!hl& 3 Plthburth 1·5, Monl'l'ttl ~l Clnclnn111 7.0, Sin DI"° 2·7 Pel. .781 .600 .500 .484 .4-06 .364 .813 .600 .545 .455 .37~ .306 GB 8 9 911 12 131\ 2 5 71\ 1011 Alllnlft '-1, S.fn ~"'ICIKO 4-2, lat 9~m1 ID lnnlnel ClllcllOO J. SI, Louil 2 Hou11on 2, l.11 Altl.iet l Tltd1y•1 011M1 PllllldtlPl'lll (LtrlCl'I 1·11 11 Monlrt1! fTOrt'll! .,, Hou1tvn ID!rrttr >U 1t 5an DMo l.Acost1_1•1l, nrtht Sin Fr1nclsco fM<.Do-.11 S.I) 11 LH A""'" !John Wl nlollt 0nlY 111'1\n t.crlflkll'1f T11111C11.,..1 O._ Phll.-dtllll'll• •I Monlrt•t, night Hew Yortl If ClllcaDO Pllhbuftll 11 &t. Louis. nlehl All•nl• 11 ClncJnn1111, nlellt S.n fr•nclico 11 Lff Allflftt, nl91\t Howton II S.n 01'90, '· IWl-nfeht AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division W L Cleveland 17 10 Detroit 16 12 Baltimore 15 13 New York 12 15 Boston 9 17 Milwaukee 8 17 West Division Chicago 18 10 Oakland 17 10 Minnesota 17 11 Texas 15 15 Kansas City 12 18 Angels Ii 19 sund•Y'• ltff\1111 New Yon: 6-l, 8ottll'n J.2 T1x1• S.3, Mlnl'IHOI• 2·1 ll1rttmore S, Mllw1uk" O Dltnilt S. Cl.wl•nd 0 Chl(ffO ,, C1llNrn1t I o.-11n11 s, K1n1h City 2 TN1'1"1 Ol rntl Pct. .630 ,571 .536 .444 .346 .320 .843 .630 .&07 .500 .400 .367 GB l'h 211 5 711 8 II l • 7 8 Clllcqo CWood 1-2) •I T1x1• (8ot11,.n f .I), Plltihl C•ui.,,.i. (l!.y111 2-ll ti Olkl1nd (H11n1,r 2·21, nleht 0n1, •-ld'l«lulff T11111C1t,•• 01mn C.Jlt."llt •t Olkl•l'ld, """' Mll'IMMl• •I K1n11• City, nlthl Clllueo 11 T1x1•. nlthl Mltw1uk• 11 Dltrolt, nlel!t ci. ... 1111111 •I ,...., Y«tl, nltht B•lllrnofl I f lotton. nllht D·EAN LP!WIS 1966 HARBOR BLVD ., COSTA MESA S.rvlct and Pam for All lmportad Cars Modem Body Shop for All Cars 646-9303 Orange caunty's Largest a~d Most Modem Toyota and Volvo Dealer OVIRllAI OI LIV IRY l 'ICIALllTS No"'· he is an assistant football coach. and· track" coarh-t<>bc at Andrc"·s. ''"1any folks think that I don't like being Sammy Baugh's son because they figure I'm obligated to be like him," the 28-year-old David said. ''But it's really not that big a deal. I'm glad people are interest ed , both in me and my father. I consider it a blessi ng instead of a bother." In other words. he feels people accept hin1 as D.:ivid Baugh rather than "son of Sammy Baugh.·• "That's right. And gro""·ing up tn a small to\vn, aclually on a ranch oul!ide Rotan, made it so easy." he said. For one thing, television had not react.. ed Rotan until after David's formative years. "We used to listen to the Redskins games on the radio, but I actually saw my Dad play only three times." \Vhen he wa s eighl, David visited Philadelphia, "the Red.skim lost and that's ""'hat griped me."' and Washington. He went to Amarill o a year later to see the Redskins in an exhibition game. The &-foot-2 frame that had bounced David on its knees looked a little smaller from the bleachers, ''but gosh he looked fast. I wasn 't used to seeing him run like th at." In the early ro•s, as Sammy was wind- ing: up a career that included six years when he led the NFL in passing. David 's friends began to rea lize his father 's fame as a professional athlete. "That's when my friends began to ask so many questions. but it wasn 't until high school that I realized that the ques- tions could have been a bother," David Baugh said . \Vhilf? Rotan 's locale kept David away from professional football stadiums for all but three games. it also kept Sammy out of a great part of David's life. "Dad never sa w me play football or run track after junior high school, '1 he said. DEAN LEWIS 1972 TOYOTA CARINA WITH FACTORY AIR CONDITIONING s7200 PER MONTH St\.70 Total Down -S72.00 Tot1I Monthly P1ymenf. •:11520 tor 1orty Eight Mo1. Def•rred - $l SSO.OO/C•1h -$2794.70 A,I. 12.76 on •pproved credit. 1972 VOLVO 142 SEDAN WITH FACTORY AIR CONDITIONING $9900 PER MONTH $117.46 Total Down -DtftrrM $6057.46. Ca1h Price $424'.27 Incl. T & L/APR 15.36 on app. crMlt 1972 TOYOTA MK 11 STATION WAGON WITH FACTORY AIR CONDIT IONING s9aoo PU MONTH $147.U Tot•I Down/$ ..... Tot•I Monlhtr Prmt. fw ••rty lltht Months. Defen.. S41UJJ APlt 12.60 <~'"--_, ....... cl"tdlt, RT7tOI • Top Boxer At Home On Canvas LONDON AIP I -The nearest most boxers get to art Ls the remodeling of op- ponents' reatures . But British fighter Kevin Finnegan is adept on more than one type of canvas. Finnegan , 2 3 ·ye a r. o Id brother . of Euroirean light heavyweight champion Chris Finnegan. i~ a leading con- tender for the British mid-~leweight crown cifter only five losses in 76 fights . And he paints portr;iits and still life in the Old !\1asters' style that belies his agressiveness in the ring. His paintings, frequ ently on dis~Jay in the London gym. nas1um where he trairts, are in demand, too. "\Ve've got a tenner ($26) a time for some that were on show," said Finnegan's tra iner, Freddie Hill. "You wait until he's cham- pion. They'll be paying a hun- dred nicker {$2601 oc. more for that lot ." he said, pointing to the paintings displayed in the gym. I must make sure he"s goL them signed properly. We've started lo get the art experts in and they are quite lmoressed." Finnegan. a stvlish dresser, says he starled off with "a few nudes of the wife. She's a dolly, with a real model figure and dark hair. "As a kid I alwavs wanted to get into art. NoW ii helps me relax between fil;lhts, a so.rt of therapy if you like." He confesses he once was a hot head and was banned for life by amateur boxing of- ficials after he jumped into a rin.e: to dispute a decision that had gone against his brother. "I was mad about it at the time, but I wouldn't pull a stroke like that now," he said. He was reinstated by the Bo:t· ln~ Boa rd in 1968. His da y is cro wded. He's up early for road\\•ork. then puts in eight hours as a garage mechanic before lwo hours in the gym each night l\1ost of · his spare tinie is devoted to painting and his wife ~1aralynn. 21. and their 21~-vear-old daughter. Lisa. "The only way I could think of to get big money was fighting," Finnegan e:tplained. "I can make a little money painting. But most artists have to die before they get fam ous. I can't wait that long." !J TheA~0;:,1::_ Method HOLD BALANCE INTO HEADWIND The biggest problem when hit· ting shots into a headwind is not with los.s of distan'ce. but rather wi1 h faulty direction. The .wind ~·ill magnify the error of a mis· direct ed shot, forcin1it to fly much fa rther off line than normal. , ... I The only way to solve this problem is to strike these shots as sq uarely as possible. This re· quires ovcrcomina the natural tendency to swing more forcefully than normal in an effort to ncaate any loss of _distance. Instead you must stress swingioa as smoothly as possible. I suggest you concentrate on "balance•• during these shots. Try to · ''grip" the turf with your feet as you swing, and finish with your weight established almost solely OD your le(t (oot , .._ • -""' NAl\..Mo--.1)"'.- PUT POWER BACK INTO YOUR SW1NG!-With the help of Arnold P1lm1r'• Ulu1tr1t1d booklet, "T" Shott. i nd F1irw1y Woods." ·send 20$ •nd 1 s11f.1ddr1s11d, stlmptd envelope to Arnold P1lm1r, in c1r1 of this newspaper. Dune Buggy Crown Goes to Costa Mesan CORONA -Costa ttesa's Greg Murdock won the four- lap, dune buggy trophy dash and was fifth in the 25-13.p, buggy main event in the Southern Cali f ornia Independent Drivers' Associa- tion racing at Corona Race way Saturday night. In addition, Mesa's Jim Chamberlain was fourth In the main event and third in the trophy dash . Famoso Gomez of. ~1exic9 City rtiles as a slight· 6-5 choict to turn back Tijuana's Cesar Deiga in their 12-round bantam weight elimination bout on tonight's tripleheader boxing card at the Forum. Gomez. ranked No. 5 in the 118-pound di vision. owns a record of 28-5. Desiga, holding down the No. 10 spot, sports a career mark of 32-2--4. They will both be battling to meet w o r Id bantamweight champion, Rafael Herrera in J une at the Forum. Two other 10-rounders will match welterweights Armando Muniz and Raul Soriano and Lightweight Frankie Crawford paired with Mexico's Chucho Alonzo. Muniz, ranked No. 5 in the welterweight division, is the North American welterweight champion. A win over Soriano would put him in line for a light with World J r. mid- dleweight champion, Koichi \Vajima , of J apan. Soriano is the c u r re n t welterweigh t champion o f Mexico and own victories over · Ernie flndian Red) Lopez, Ralph Charles and a knockout win over Adolph Pruitt. The first International soc- cer match of 1972 involving two of the top British pro- fessional teams, takes place at the Los Angeles Coliseum Sun- day at 3 p.m. · The event. soonsored iointly by the United States Soccer Football Association and the California Soccer Association South, features the we J I known Wolverhampton F'.C. better known as the English Wolves and the Aberdeen Football Club. the dynamic Dons of Scotland. Proceeds from the annual In ternational Soccer match go towards the Youth Develop- ment Fund of Southern California. NIMA Pirates Splash To Water Polo Title The rematch between these two great soccer teams has been requested many times during the past 1Cour years. by hundreds of the excited fans of the historic game that took place in Los Angeles July 14, 1967 before a crowd of 17,824 fans. Orange Coast Co 11 e g e ' s NIM A Pirates S\\'ept to the major title in the inaugural Costa 1\-lesa Aquatics open water polo tourney Sundav. prompting co a ch Jack F'uller1on to remark. "It 'A'aS one of the best efforts of any team I've ever coached . His Pirates ripped Balboa Bay Club Club Corona: 10-2. in the finals aft er taking the measure of the latter's No. 2 club earlit'r, 24-0 . In other finals competition it v.•as the Busher club on top of the NIMA Pirales No. 2. 11· 3 in 18-and-under. and Phillips 66 bested f .A S.T .. 8-3 . in the 16-and·under classification. Deep Sea Fish Report Leading the Pirate's open division conquest were John Carpenter and Dan Kent . "The entire team played an outstanding fi!ame. but these two really did a great job." said F'ullerton. The \\'innin1? coach credited Carpenter with his overall complete hu stle game and Kent with heads up play of- fensivelv and defensively . Kent led all scorers in the ti- tle game with three goals while Tom Warnecke and ~·1ike Beal added two apiece. Singles tallies were credited to Jim Smith, !\like O'Brien and Carpenter. Corona's onlv JtOals \\'ere chalked up bv Scott Newcomb and Brian f\1i\ich. Busher's big scnrers were Torn Curran and Mike Saw;i\n with three apiece while the winninfi! Phillips 66 club f!Ot a seven-goal performance from Bnb Robinette. The Aberdeen Club. one of the finest of Scotland ·will be seeking a revenge of the 6-5 loss to the English Wolves, then known locallv as Jack Kent Cooke's L.A. Wolves. Laguna 3rd In To1rrney Bowlers In Action At Kona George Shore of Pico Rivera attempted to maintain his lead in the 12th annual West Coast ri.1atch Game Elimination!i Monday while Westminster's Fred Riccilli bids to improve on his fourth place position. Shore rolled an 891 four- game series last Monday night in the opening round of the tourney at Kona ~nes in Costa Mesa to take a three-pin lead over Gardena'! George Vallevieni. · Riccilli trails by 21 pins and is just seven behind the third place bowler -E. G. Mock of Lynwood. Other .area bowlers in th e top 20 include Hunt ington Beach's Bud Rose (10th), Costa Mesa 's Charlie Sihilling (12th) and Westminster's Ray Bryson (18th ). Bob Ramirez of Anaheim, who captured the tourney in 1961 and '64, is in the No. 7 spot while San Bernardino's Gary Madison, the '70 winner, is 2oth. Bob Knipple of Long Beach, the 1966 victor, is 40th and IAmar Keck. the 1968 and '69 champ. is 78th. Action begins at 9 p.m. T" It Bowi.i-1 ~o.s.. l owttr Cl!y Pt111 I. Geor11t $1'10,., Pico IUvtrt It\ 1. George Velelvltnl, G1rden1 l!I 3. E.G. Mock, Lynwood Ill •· Frtd RlccUll, Wttlmln1ttr 11n S. Cl'>rl1 Lowry. Rlv1r1ldt 16~ 6. Bob P1rry, •rctdll 16' 1. 8Gb Ramirez, Aneneim 167 1. ~alDll Lombard, Redondo 8t•<~ Ml f. Jtrry O"Nelll, Tontnce 1161 Bud Ro~, Hur.tlnt!on 8tlcl'I 161 Oll>rrs -12. C!!t rlir Sl!!ll!tne ((~!a Me~aJ u7; II. Riv srv1on 1W,;tmln1t1r) Ill: ?J. Fred ODuih,rty !Co1!1 Me11l 125: 21. Bri1n McMthon tC.0111 Me11) Ill; l.S. Ouane Hitk~ 1Mi111on \llt iol lll1; '5. civet l tcner (Oant Point! 79?: •9. ICevln Gannon twe11mln1ttr) 7191 5!. G1rv Coulter (Min ion Vltlol 7111!; 51. Larry Scl'I011nl1l!ltr {Cost1 M1uJ 76•. Baseball's Top 10 NATIONAL LEAGUI! 81lTTING 165 ti b•h) -Torr,, Sil. .]1l; S1n11uillfn. Pon, .356; Lff, SO, .l<l; Mond1Y. Chi, .:l-te; A. Oliver, Pon, ,33l. RUNS -Moroan, Cin, 31 ; Wvnn. Hin. 7•1 B'i"OS, SF , 11; To\1n, Cin, 2l; WahD<I, Htn. 1l. RUNS BATTED IN -1Cinom1n, SF, '1; S!t•Ot ll, Pgn, 2S: Tol an, Cin, 71; Wynn, Htn, 2]; Colbert, SO, 7l; BoflCh, SF, ll. HITS -Brock, SIL, U ; Torrt, StL, ~I; ~tnoull!fn, ~9)1, '7; A. Ollvtr, Poh, ~2; Tolin, Cln, <IO. DOUBLES -S!1r11el!, P911, 1G; Atee, NY,,, Mg.n!IMJ, Phi, 9; Toltn, Cln, t ; 80,,<h, SF,•; SP<!ler, SF, 9. TlllPLES -C1rdt111I, Chi, 1; T. M1rll11e1, NY. J; Frttosi, NY, J ; Sa11tui!le-n. Pwh, Jr Tolin. Cln, l 1 Bond~. SF. l; Klntmt~. SF, l, HOME ll UNS -Colbt•!, SD. •; Star.Qtll, Poh. I; Ki n11m111, SF, I: Wvnn, H1n, 7; Lu1lnskl, Phi, 6; H. Aaron. At l, •; T. Perez, C!n, 6: L. M1y, Hin, 6. STOLEN BASES -Morven. Cin, 15; Brock, Sll, llr Tolan, Cin, 111 Cedtno, Hin, !0; l(ongm1n, SF, t. P !T(H!NG !l O"'Cl1ions) -J. Rav, Hin, 7.{I, 1.000; I.IS M1!11ck, NY, j.{I, l 00. ? 11 Svllon. LA. 5·0, 1 000, 0.39 Mershtll, Mon. ].{I, 1.000. 1.46 S11vtr, NY. 1·1. .115, 2.U en11. P9n . .S-1 .. Ill. 7 SI Nolin. Cln, .S-l, .133. 7.59 0Slffn. LA. S-1. .Ill, 1 OJ. STlflKEOUTS -(~rl1cn, Ph;, 7'; Se1v1r, NY, SI; McDowtlt SF. ~I; Sulton. Lil, <13; Kirby, SD. •l; Norm•n. SD, •l. Meet the Man Behind the DAYE ROSS PONTIAC'S EXCLUSI VE NEW CAR Safeco Smile. Yachttn11: liability eoverage at up to 1,-1 or what you may be paying no\l'' Smile, You're With Safeco. & A1Mtlllfl, \II(. ~ llAFECD INBURANC& 474 E. 17TH STREET COSTA MESA 642°6500 -546-3205 • 5 YEAR/50,000 MILE WanRanty At No E JClra Chtlr g;i P1<1' .l lo!>Ot a• r,., '' "e'"" ~ •" • DAil Y PILOT Q 12 Coast Residents in Senior Games A doun Orange Coast area residents are included on !he list of competitors for the lh.ird annual Senior \Yorld Championship Games, wh ich \VIII be held at variOU! sites In the South 1 a n d inclusivrly between June 3-25. A total or seven sparts and over 700 entrants from all over the world will compete in the Games, which are open to any man or woman ovu 35 years of age except in swint· ming and diving, where age 25 ls the mlnimum. Traclt and field entrants from this area are Laguna Nlguel's Jim Delaney In the 50-55 sh<ll put : F'ounti\i n Valley's Alex Gilbert in the 35. 40 5,000.meter walk : San Ciemente 's John MacLarhlan In the 40-45 5,000 and 10.000- meter walks ; and Corona de1 Mar 's Ross Y.'inton in the all· round, 400 meters and 1600- meter relay. Representing the area In SYtimming are Lag u n a Beach's Frank Rooth In the 100 and 200-meter freestyle and 100 backstroke ; Corona del Mar's Jlm Eubank in the 100, 200, 400 and 1500-mc!er freestyles: tl unlington Beach·s Rita Simonton in Lhe 150-meter Individua l medley and 400 freestyle: and Huntington'• Ken Koster in the indo, 100 backstroke and 100 and .00 free styles. Area tennis compelltors are Costa Mesa's Sandy Bertscb and Dorothy Hogen, Hunt· ini;iton's Mary Rad abaugh and Laguna's Esther South. Certificate Below Worth Dollars tire from Delta FREE REPLACEMENT DOWN TO TRIAD Wl.ll INDICA.TOU -·· SRti\JlD THIS Tilt: llCOMI DIPICTIVI DUI TO WOlkMANSHI' OR MATlllALS POl THI LIPI Of THI Tiii. Tire Co. With our bonded war· ranty, you are protected against nailhole, road hazards, wreck, collision and even run· ning flat: TUBELESS WHITEWALLS SIZE PRICE D78-13 or 700· 13 .......... $20.86 E78· 14 or 735-14 .. .. .. .. .. 22.65 F78-14 or 775-14 .......... 24.01 G78·14 or 825-14 .......... 25.08 H78·14 or 855-14 .......... 26.34 J78-14 or 885-14 .......... 27.60 G78·15or825-15 .......... 25.20 H78-15 or 855-15 .......... 26.34 J78·15 or 885-15 .......... 26.97 DCISI TU 1.t7 J.24 J.Jt 2.11 2.7$ 2.fl 2.6J J.11 3.0t WINSTONo11 L78·15 or 915-15 .......... 29.79 ALL l"RICIS PLUS IXCISt TAX AD SAL!S TAX VREDESTEIN RADIAL PLY TUBE TYPE BLACKWALL (MADE IN HOLLANDI SIZE PRICE 165-13 ................ $21.26 185-13 ................ 26.35 165-14 ................ 23.01 175-14 .... ,. .......... 25 .32 185-14 ................ 26.88 155-15 ................ 22.46 165-15 ................ 23.82 All ,RICl5 ,LUS flDIRAL IXCISI AND STA.Tl SALIS TAX IXCISt , .. '·'' , .17 1.71 1.17 J.01 1.61 1.79 ,,,, DUNE BUGGY TIRE 11-15 .... , , . .. . . . .. . . .. .. $21.24 IX. TAI J.47 SIZE SUPER WIDE FULL 4 PLY WIDE OVAL TYPE TUBELESS WHITEWALL OR WHITE LEnERS PRICE IXCISI TAJ D70·14 or 695-14 ...... $21.69 J.11 E70-14 or 735-14 ...... 23.65 1.16 *F70-14 or 775-14 ...... 25.24 2.60 *G70·14 or 825-14 ...... 26.72 1.77 * H70-14 or 855-14 27.48 J,fJ f.70-15 or 775· 15 24.18 1.U G70·15 or 825-15 25.86 I.It H70-15 or 855· 15 27.33 J.ot • AYAILAILI IN WHITI LmlllD llLTID TlllS. Store Hours: Mon ., Tues., Wed ., Thurs., Fr i. 1:00 1.m.·6 p.m. $1turd1y 1:00 1.m. to 12 noon. Ctoaed Sunday. • OLIVIR AND WINSTON, INC . '·'··· DELTA TIRE COMPANY COSTA MESA -141 E. 17th St. -645·2010 I f OAl~V PILOT Newport -:H;;IJor Yacht Season Officially Under Way ' • • -~ • I \ 1.' ' I It , ,, • ERS YACHT CLUB SALUTES COLORS u1I Ritts Follow 8 re1 kf11t At Quarttr5 BURGEE CARRIED ABOARD CUP DEFENDER 8111 Ficker and BCYC Commodore Brian Carter Independence Wins In Overton Series "lohn Llnskey'! Yankee.JO sloop Independence won the 85·mile Santa Barbara 1~1And Race Sunday to take the lead Gremlin II Takes Ra ce Gremlin II. \11ilh Harry Arnold or Pacifir l\larinC'rs Yacht Club at lhf' hl'lm \\'On the Mafibu-Tr11nshny R~ce &turday Jn CaJHorn1a Yncht Cluh's Matt \Yaish Series for Midget CkeRn Ra cing Flecl yachts. Rf'sulls: l\10Rf-(l l Gremlin II: !2! Wilch Craft . F'red Dutt on, CYC; (:ll Tequ!l<1 Char!!'s EK, PMYC. Pl~RF·A-( 1 J Lare. Ftnrh & Badd ilr~·. Kl-IVC: 121 Arrih;i, Bob Bilson, Si\IYC; t3) Ji7fi, Fred Shorr, CYC. PHRF-8-! l l Sundog. Harry Snyder, DRYC; 121 Pacnmida JI, Phll Sanford, \V YC. In Cahforn ia ''acht Club's Overton Series. The series has one remaining race. First boat lo finish was Ed Su11dher,1:(s C;i!-43 Sundancer skippered by 18-yea r-old Ben~ ny l\1itchr!l and manned by a crev; of 1ecnai:rrs. Su ndanre r linishrd 11! 8:55 a.n1. but was unable lo .<;ave Iler handicap !11ne nn · lndcprndence. The rare i:;farted Saturday at 11 11.ni. in Ji~ht airs off l\1ar1n a de! Re y. final resu lts: OVF;RALL -~I ) lndept·n· denrr: 12) Sundancer : i.1) Blue T\-lax , Bill Le1vis, \VYC. CLASS A -I I I Sundancrr: 12 ! Borba. Mickey C:Olich, CVC: (31 Windlassy, J, Sclt~;un. Pl\fYC. CLASS B -(I l Aqua\'1t, Chris llansen, CYC; f 2 ) Lynh1. Jii ckson Scott. CYC; t ~ i l\iadrugador. Bill Allen. C\'C CLA!\S (' -111 C.nuntlct. Ed \\'oodll'lnd. S ~I Y C: !2l Qu ick~ih·cr. r a Im i er i & (fussian. \V\'C'. 1~1 Cheetah, Dick Pennington. KH\'C CLASS D -l l) lndept>n· df'nce ; (2i Blue ~fax : 131 Starfir!.'. Ra lph Fiedler, WYC. Scene of .2 Race s , ,Rite s Hi ghlight Gain Openings By AL.'10N 1..ocKABEV O•lh' l'llel •••11119 •on1r The 1972 yachttng season i1 off icially on in Newport Har· bor. Six local yacht clubs pro- claimed it so Saturday in col· orful nag raisin.1: ceremonielf lo the accompaniment of music, prayers. prize-giving and gala open house aboard gaily "dressed" yachts." Thi~ is the third year that all the yacht clubs in the lla rbor Area ex cept Newport llarbor Yacht Club have co!· Jaborated on a co mmon "open- in g day ." NHYC chose to stay 'with ' it s tradilionaf Mother's Da y da te for observing the opening of a new seasoQ. ~·ere at I J: 30 with Com. modore Bryan Carter in- troducing flag officers, 8taif commodores and v i ~ i t i n g yachtsmen. A highlight of the BCYC affair was a presen- tation by Bill Ficker of a BCYC burgee that he carri~ on the 12-meter Intrepid dur· - ing the America's Cu p-defense in 1970. South Shore Sailing Cl ub and Lido Isle Yacht Club both held their season open in g ceremonies at noon with formal nag ra ising, yach t in· spections and int roduction of officers and guests. Com- modore Dick Bauer pres ided at &SSC and Commodore Ed Hayes was in charge at LIYC. ' • I ~ •• •• ., .. -• ' .. .. -_, .. ' j • .. ,,. ,. }. • .. .. : . • ,.. •• • •:· ~;;·--::> Ctubs celebrating the riles Saturday were Balboa Yacht Club, next to the oldest club in the area ; Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club. Voyagers Yacht Cl ub . South Shore Sailing Club an d Shark Island Yacht Club. One of the top features at most clubs was the awarding of trophies a n d com· mendations for the most im· maculate yachts in the va rious club squadrons. The awards came as the result of minute inspec tions by trained com· mlttee men and women. Most elaborate and colorful of the day's events was at Balboa Yacht Clu b where severa l score ' 'd r e s s e·d yachts" were lined up stern·to the docks for inspection and open house. Another highlight BYC CELEBRATES OPENING OF 49th SEASON AT GA LA ANNUAL CEREMON IES Staff Commodores Join Commodore J ack Bai ll ie In Sal ute to Colors The only club not holding formal ceremonies was Shark Jsland Yacht Club, the area's all -powerbo at club, which is occupying temporary quarters white a new clubhouse is being planned. SJ.Ye cooperated in the open- ing day fcstivitles by leading a colorful parade. or power and sail yachts in a parade around the har bor in mid-afternoon. Voyagers Ya cht Club led off the day 's activities with a breakfast in its second story quarters on Via Lido, followed by formal flag-raising rites at 10 a.m. and a trophy presen· talion for past races at 10 :30. Com mod ore Don Du Bose presided over the affair. Bahia Corinthian Ya ch t Club's form a 1 ceremonies of the opening was the launch- ing of the club's new launch which was built alm ost entire- ly by members. Commodore Jack Baillie presided and introduced flag officers and a long list of staff commodores. Opening Day ceremonies on the West Coast is a throw- back to the traditional spring commissioning rites on the East C.Oast ~·here yachts are hauled out and placed in dry storage during the winter months. On the West Coast, where most clubs are open and ac- tive the year-around, the event takes on a SOCial flair and gives members a chance to dress up their yachts and do a litt le boat-hopping. Here are the trophy winners in the yacht inspections of the club s reporting: Balboa Yacht Club Sweepstakes winner a n d best maintained sail yacht over 35 feet , Roger McKin- non's K-50 Grog. Best maintained po wer yacht over 30 feet, La Fiesta, , ~ vice commcxlore Ge orge · Hoedinghaus. "' Powerboat under 30 feet , Carina, Preston Zillgitt. Sailboat over 30 feet , Enta sis (Cal-34 1 Lee Kline. Sailboat under 30 feet, . .., . / Moonshine, GCQrge Eastman. > One-design keelboa t ,..,. :: . Mistress, Bil! Taylor. .""J!:l:· Junior centerboard, Keith · Ki lpatrick's Sabot ,..:~~ · A special award was given -'""'~; to Jesse w. <;:urtis Jor the best-ma intained boat over 50 years old, Idle Hour. Bahia C.Ori nthlan Yacht Club Sweepstakes, best owner. maintained s a 11 boa t , San- derling, Bob Poole. Best ow n er-maintained wooden sailboat, Voyager, Larry Fogg. Bes t ow n er-maintained powerboat, Sea Den, Sam b1ock. Alamitos Bay Skipper Captures Lido-14 Title Best professionally main- tained sailboat, Sally, Ernest Kanzler. Best maintained j u n l o r dinghy, Randy Ames, Sabot. South Shore Salling Club Best maintained yacht away from club dock, Sundial, Bill Baker. Dick Lineberger of Alamitos Bay Yacht Club was the win- ner of Huntington Harbour Yacht Club's Lidi;l4 Tourna- ment of Champions Regatta Saturday and Sunday. The event drew 39 boats in four clssses for the three UC Irvine's McDermaid Cop s Crowi:i Doug Raste!Jo of USC a'nd Jeff MrDermaicl of UC Irv ine won the single h a n d e d eliminations for the national Intercollegiate yachting cham- pionships Sunday at S a n t a Barbara. The JI -race series involved 11 sc hools in a regatta sailed under the sponsorship of UC Santa BarbarR . 1·1ie Jntercollegiate Yacht Racin~ Associat ion or North America championships will be hel d at Mission Bay starting June 19. The single- handed eliminations at Santa Barbara wt"re tiailed in Kite Class catboats . _The fina ls at i\lission Bay will be sailed in Laser Class boats. USC find UC Irv ine also u•ill represent the Pacific Coast Yacht Racing Association in the nat ional dinghy and team. racing championship.s. races: on Saturday and two on Sunday. Final results: CHAMPIONSH IP CLASS - f 11 Snoopy. Dic k Lineberger, ABY C; (2 ) Wood Wind, Harry Wood, ABYC; (3) Captain's Fancy, H.P. Jeffer son, MBYC; (4) Wild Wind, Dale Berkihiser, ABYC. CLASS A -(I) Avec le Vent, Tim Mulvaney, VYC; (2) Blue Lemon, Don Brad- bury. BYC; (3) Fanny Soaker, Bruce Orsborn, CBYC; ( 4) Graffiti. Mike Fink, HHYC. CLASS B -ill Van Go, Gforge Vandervort, LIYC: (2) Snoop John B, John Johnson, HHYC: (3J Tio Grand, Robert Ucciferri. Sl BYC; (4) Ral Fink, Al Fink, HHYC. NOVICE -(1 ) Tenacious, Betty Brooks, BYC; (2) I Pass. Don Dalbeck, HHYC; 13~ No. 2970, D. V. Black, HHYC: 141 No. 3561, Greg Bingham, HHYC. CdM High Top Regatta Competitor Corona de! Mar High School \\'On the ~uthern California lnterscholas'tic Sailing Con- ft"rence Dinghy Regatta Sun· day in a series of seven races sailed out of the OCC Sailing and Crew Base on Newport Har bor. • " •'<la Best maintained yachts at club dock, 1'he Hampshire Rose, Dennis 'Burnett; Amorio, Guy lnshaw. PRIZE-GIVING IS FEATURE OF SOUTH SHORE SAILING CLUB OPENING Officers Greet Family Member At Clubhouse Ceremoni es Arraignment Set For 7 Charged In Stock Ca se Superior Court arraignments have been scheduled June 13 for a Fountain Valley man and six ci;defendants named in an Orange County Grand Jury in- dictment on charges stemming from what police said was an $11 million stock fraud scheme. Judge William Murray set the ar- raignment date for Ralph Ernst.sen. 44. of 18903 Santa Clara Circle , immediately after the Grand Jury endorsed charges of stock fraud against Ernstsen and si1 alleged ci;conspira tors. All were arrested two weeks ago after an investigation that began in December, 1970, when a Pasadena company in- structed a New York bank to de stroy surplus blank stock certificates bearing the company's name. It is alleged that the certificates were not destroyed and were later used as col- lateral in attempts to obtain substantial loans from banks in the United States and Europe. Orange County district attorney's in· vestigators moved in three months ago when $100,000 of the phony stock alleged· ly began to circulate in th is area. Free on bail and promises to appear are Ernstsen, Finn I. Konsm an, 57, Tustin. and Merele T. Schroer, 4.S, Orange. 'Card System' Rescinded By San Joaquin Board An administrative procedure designed to keep meetings orderly has been dealt a blow by trustees of the San Joaquin Elementary School District. The "card system" wh ich req uireir those wishing to speak at meetings to fill out a card with his name, address and topic. was unanimously res c i n d e d \Vednesd ay in the interest of freedom of speech. Removing the card sys tem was originally suggested by ne"•ly elected trustee Joseph Peterson Jr. He said he made the request because he felt that if someone has something to say. he should say it. "I'm in fa vor of Jetting everyone be heard," agreed trustee Robert Dameron. "But I don 't want a board mem ber to be recalled just because he misses a hand." Tru stee Preston Howell concurred with the request to eliminate the cards and suggetsed the speaking time allotted each Swarm of Bees Hol.di11g Up Work At Newport Sit.e individual be increased from three to five minutes. Speaking from the aud ience, Denis Duf .. fy of Mission Viejo sa id he thought the card system had been a "travesty of justice." "In no \\•ay should the public not voice an opin ion or rebut what has been heard ,·· he sa id. He intimated that if board members voted down the proposal to eliminate the cards, they would be closing their minds to all but their personal friends \\'ho have access to them . Official Bu gged By Getting $35 Mosquito Check Reciving a check for $35 as a sti pend for an hou r's \\'Ork mighl be a nice spoon- ful of gravy for some public servants. Bu t San Cleme nte City C-Ouncilman Cliff ~1yers doesn't think so. In fa ct. he di slikes the $35 payment so much that he has resigned as the city's delegate to the county Mosqullo Abate- ment District. Sailboats Talie Ove r Harbor Skippers for the winning school were Tom Willson. Skip Bec k and Phil Green. They · had si1 wins and A seC1lnd for a low score of 6~ points. The races "'ere sailed in 12· 15 knot "'inds over a 14:-m ile '\'ind\\'ard leeward course. Summa ry: Hazel Buff um, Writer's Wife Dies at 52 Work ts slowing down at a Newport Center construction site -a nasty swarm of bees is see ing to that. Hundreds of bees, unea rthed from an underground hive Thursday by a bulldozer operator grading a b~ilding site. attacked the man as he sat 1n the saddle of the giant machine. The v~cationing council man won his re- quest \\r~nesday and fellow councilman T?m O'Keefe served as emissary for the disenchanted ~ryers. ''~e honestly feels that accepting. the $3S 1s a waste of taxpayer's money and that the entire structure of the distric¥ board should be changed," O'Kee(e related. The OCl'Rn between Ne\\'porl and Hunling!on Bench "'al' alh·e 'vit h rac ing sa11tx1111s Sunday as lwo yacht clubs rlln major sP r l e s ra ces simultaneously. 811,bo• Y>cht CI u b'' Hunt lng1nn 21)..f11thom race was parl of the 66 Stries, and Vo)'ltgen Yncht Club's Hun· tlr?gton FJ111s rare was a reature of the Ma.Mey Series for MORF 1nd PHJIF rated )'IC'hts. Overall winner o{ B\1C'1 ract w1s Jack Ba 1111 e 's NewsBoy from the host club. In tile VYC M1S1ey Seri., Bob Myer 's Mulloney from BYC won the MORF division and Cb11qul. skippered by Don ! Ch~1e, Lahai1111 YC. "'as !he "·inner in !he PHRF di vision. ere llunllnglon %0-Fal bom OVERALL -(l l NpwsBov; !2J Tr ibute, Dirk Blalterma·n. R''C: (.i~ s,vifl , Arri~o It J\fallinkrodt. BY\. CLASS A -1 J l NewsBoy: !2\ Tribu1r: IJ\ Dorolhy 0, Boh B<'auchamp. NH\·c. CLASS B -i l l Swill: 12\ Bellina IV. Tom Schock. NllYC: 13 1 Holldoy. P.H. Noll, N!IYC. ' CLASS C -(I) PTimer1 . Phil Morgan . NHYC: 121 Counterpoint, BUI Headdtn, BYC: C3I NeJ1, Jim Borror, BYC. J, O..Ap;> D -'111 Moonshint, Bill von l\leinSmlclt. NHYC: (2 1 Ho\v li n Owl , Lew Ross. !\1HYC: c11 De Cort, Gal Preston, NHYC. ~fORF' -(\I Sails Le Vie, Dubose & Wold. VYC; 121 ll<bo HI, Bob Darntll, VYC; tJ l Libre. Joe Kaltenbach. CBYC. \'C))'l.(UI Yacht Club HunUngton Flats Race MORF -(I) Mullan•y: (2) Esperanu. Bob Boag. VYC; 13\ Bebo Ill. Bob Darnell. VVC; (41 Sall• Le Vis, Don 0ubo5', VYC. PHRF -111 Ch•~qul; 12) Counldowp, Larry B o o I b , SSSC; (31 Wind Child, Lee Arms tr on g, VYC: (4 ) Ransom. Dave Otto, \rYc. I CORONA DEL MAR - (Tom Willson. Skip Beck . Phil Green I -1-1·1·1·2-ll, 6\1 . C ATALINA I SLAN D SCHOO L -(Mik• Dennis. Mike Taylor ), 4-5-2..!·J.2·3, 22 points. ESTANCIA HIGH SCHOOL -(John Gill, Brod Bl•esl 2- DNS.3-DNS.t. DNS.2, 2111 pts. COSTA MESA ff I G H SCHOOL (l) Bill Smallwood, Bruce Hub er t, Tim Gailqberl. W-5-2#2, 26 plS. POLYTECHNlC HS -(l) RIVER SI DE POLY· TECHNIC HS -(I) John Pitchford. Nina Nielsen ). 4-5- 3-1-4.1-DNF, 29 pts. Hazel Buffum, wife of Los Angeles col- umnist Richard D. Buffum, is dead at age $2. Mrs. Buffum died Friday at lhe Long Beach Memorial Hospital following 1 lengthy illness. Memorial services are scheduled for 1 p.m. Tuesday at Fairhaven Memorial Pll'k in Santa Ana. Mn. Buffum ls survived by her hus- band, whose· column appears In the Orange County edition of th< Tim": a oon, Thom11, of Los Mieles : lhm daughl•n. Wendy Buffum of Los Anaelei, Mra. Richard M. Holbrook of Santa Barbara and Jull1M1 BulfUm of Costa Mesa : and a brolber, Clarence L. 1Sorensen of Vancouver. ' Doctors said later firemen from the nearby Newport center firehouse may have saved his life. Richard J. Chambers. 30, of Anaheim, was in a seml-C1lnscious state after disturbing the next Thursday afternoon. Firemen said they spotted Chambers clamoring down an embankment After deserting the bulldozer wllh the beeJ totalling enaulflni him as he fled . "We saw him jump down the hill," said Fire Inspector 'Arthur Morton . who said about seven firemen raced to bis aide and beat off the winged aggressors "with their hands and their jackets." ,Five firemen were stung, Morton said. Morton said the construction crew foreman took Cbambera lo hia family doctor for treatment and the doctor cN!dllod the qulclt acUon by ,firemen with saving the man 's life. ~1ayor Art Holmes conceded that· Myers of l~te has grown more angry abo~t ~e stipend , decause it appears that rece1~m.g the money Is an obligatory functio n. If the c.ity refu.sts to send a delegate to the meetin~s. then any mosq11u0~ abate- ment services would cease for . San Clemente. And if a del•gate 1itendJ, be gel! his $.15 bucks. Hol mes volun~red to •ttend not 11 a forilial delegate al lhil -k'a m .. tin and presumably will not collll!ICt the :f pend. In the . muntlme.. San Clemente of· flclally will lobby for a •lreamlln!J1i of tha d11trtct slruclure -ltartllJi with 1 f1v .. man . board ''P<"'lllinf • 1 c b aupervloorialt dialrict, not eadl city in th< coun y. ' WHAT HAPPENED TO MY FATMER? TUMBLEWEEDS MUTT AND JEFF FIGMENTS --:;;-- NANCY WHAT IS YOUR DAD GIVING YOUR MOTHER HE'S GIVING HER A NEW COTTAGE BY THE LAKE FOR HER B IRTHDAY? FOR.RELEASE MONDAY, VAY 22. 1972 I DAIL y CROSSWORD ••• by .... POWER I ACRO~ l Nonn1I S!ll'ldlfd • Wom,11's ~1ld 'Rrs1rd 14 Grrat Emi11Cip1tOI' 1~ Cottonwood 111 Onr rrcr l~ing ll'il19t S 11 Calltd on again 19 Tttr --20 flrpro1tt\ """"" SIKISm 21 Indignation 21 Lr1J1l 1111tter D Proor1r1dier's mark 24 Handy"''" 111 Sao ol Noah 2'f (lilt JI l ight·Hour Harry - 32 C1b 33 Cuts lb·Skrtch 38 Discordant nolsr '' Hold within 41 Ltan"l 4J ltrm of 11sl!l11g gtar 44 Wrlojll unit •b Olsthll'llts 47 In Its presenl shapt: 2. words 4'f·Frr nch Saturday Puzzlr Solvrd: swirnrr 50 Color 51 Grral: P'rtH~ 52 Olms 54 Ccntintnt: Comb. lllf'n1 SB Misthlrvcus sprite •D Fish t90ll 61 J111k •z lil<1~r void M Brntfil b6 AulhotltatiYt pronconcr- mrnt' •1 Rf!lla!n statian•Y: Nautical: 2 wards fi8 l.1"idiilfl: Abbr. 6'1 Glossy 70 Kind cf fastener 71 Epoch 'Ritt 7 Gtmstoot 8 Peoplr wllo make obj«lS l1cm plastic 111atrri1ls , l.1ast 10 Most r«tn\ II Visors 12 Espe<ial!y llldulged 13 Golf l!IOlll1d DOWN IB Net lmpiirtd 1 Divisions of 24 C11vrd a whc1t if 25 Those mcvin9 2 1.lusic wit~ quickly --: 01nc 1:7 Havt •~tuallty mllf.it: 2 28 Aroma\1t words plants 3 lilllf.lcal 30 Asctrtal11 COllltdy ))~~cf 1 '" 4 Hevr: Arch.lie _.,Vo n;. 5 Mlit111111111f-34 Unret~rrd 35 Ntrdinrss 37 Salary ~O Thcsr wl!h necrssary q111lific1t1ons 42 Edit 45 Tinrlul 48 Hcnor S3 Mt:ans cf ICCOl'llpl lsh:ntr1! 55 Oraw up 511 FuriOllS "'""' 57 M1,11ical dr1V"il 5' Anlia\rc11ft artillt ry 61 Form of Jllrtlpl\111011 62 Cluslfitd - 63 Nolhlng •5 Cansl.mlrd food ' (11' ' 5 • 1 I ~,, " II 12 " I 2 ,, .. l 15 " " 17 11 " " ... 1l -,. :~ ' . " ' " l7 " u ,, " JO °M:'(" <; 32 't -l7 " lJ " l5 ' 1" ~~ " " ' .. " .. " ·'~ m ' " " .. ! •) " ' 51 " 52 " " .. n " " " ' -61 ~· " ~ N . ,,; ""' .. .. .. 71 •• • . . • HE HAD IT GIFT WRAPPED PEANUTS ... By C!i.ster Gould ME 'fl.IR!W 'tOU ANO VOl.R SISTER ANO VOUR MOTl<E~ TO TME WOLVES TO GO AFTat DlllTV NV::JNrN •• ---::. By Tom K. Ryan WHSIE. HAVE i FAILE~? By Al Smith .MUTT, "sLURP"ls O.K • BUT YoU CAN'T"GLUP!" IT'S NOT IN THE t>ICTIONARY/ By Dale Hale by Emie BushmlDer JUDGE PARKER l. .As JUDGE PARKER HAS LUNCH ALONE IN A RESTAURANT NEAR THE COURT- HOUSE, HE 15 UN-6.WARE THAT HE IS BEING CAREFULLY OBSER'OfD SY A MAN AND HIS WIFE! MISS PEACH PERKINS GASOLINE ~LLEY SALLY BANANAS GORDO ~ -· ,._ MOON MULLINS ANIMAL CRACKERS By Harold Le Doux By Mell ' '" lly Jahn Miles ' -' l dOn't llnow. ~ue, but don't le8ve it in-the hall! Wll'/, Mir. H.AltTllUllll ! Wf.,_')t>U ...... -"4 TO 111! IN CL.IVfL>.NC> 9fof:¥,.'{. DAILV P.~.i Jt;j By Dick Moons .... ~ ... -.. • ' By Gus Arriola By Ferd Johnson By Roger Bollen ro~ "l!M eolll6 ro ASK THAI 1IJ; ALL LAq At.IOI!! OUI: 5()1.lE>LASSES Ullil L.. AFTeR 1!4Ec,llVE llEPAAlllO. THE GIRLS i 1'11'1 no \\o'ondtr tbey can afford to Include the co1t or the meals In the tour-lbty nt\'Cr give you-lime to eat ont.'' DENNIS THE MF.NACE >::,.~ ... . ., , .. . ~·~ "'fft"- "looday, M~.r 22. l ffl ff D~ll Y PILOT 'Windfall' Means House Addition to Shoshone 87 WAllRl!:N WINTllOOE f'ORT WASHAXIE. Wyo. (AP) -Rall covered by anow, the purple-hued Wind River Rong• or the Rocky Mountaina rises majestically above the three-room frame home of H11rrlton Sho)'o. Shoyo, •s. was bom near these moun- taim: and probably will d.le here. Nine members of his family Jive In the house. wblch lies on 20 actt1 near the ba.se of the mountain!. Ttmptratures fre- quently plunge btlow zero during lhe cold Wyoming winters, and Shoyo nys his house isn't well in.5Ulated. Shoyo is a full·blooded member of the Eastern Band of ShOshone Indians who live on the Wind River Reservation . t:ntil recently, he wq in no position even to think about needed repairs to his dwelling. Shoyo's income amounted lo the S50 each he, hiJ wife and their three KChool·age children received in monthly tribal payments, plus the modest income he earns u a repair-maintenance employe for the Bureau of lndlan Affairs. That all changed Jan. 21 when the 3 Indian Youths Want Braids, Get Expelled Instead PAWNEE. Okla. CAP) -A Pawnee In· dian youth who wants to grow hair Jong enough to put into braids has been re'uscd admittance to hls 7th grade classroom. The school board refused to allow Lloyd Cummings Jr., 13, back into schoo l unless he cuts his ha ir to conform with the two-year old dress code. llis mother said her son and two other lnclian bovs who were sent home "all went to dance and they want braids to dcnce in." Many Indian dancers wear their hair in braids as their ancestors did. Principal Jim Childers said that the youths' hair just recently started growing anrl lt violated the dress code. He said the three were given at least a week's witrnlng to have thei r ha ir cut and they were sent home when they appeared without the haircuts. "Wh at seem~ peculiar about this situa- tion is that with three to four weeks of school left they now want to let their hair grow. If they'll just get it cut enough to end school by complying with the code they can let it grow all summer and come back to school with it in braids. We'll let them wear It that way next fall," Childers said. "But the Cummings boy had told me he would get it cut by last weekend but he didn't get it cut." f\.frs. Cummings said she was told last month by Childers It would be perrnissable ror her son to wear his hair in braids . About ~ Pawnee citizens met with Charles F. Wilkinso n, a Boulder. Colo., man who said he wa s an eltorney with the Native American Right~ Fund. , Wilkinson told the group he will seek a court injunction against the school board's ruling that woul d enable the youths to get back into school and keep their long hair. family's monthly 1ribil check amounted to more than Sl.200 'J1le windfall rerlecled the first of It payments the Wind River Sbolbonts will receive as thtlr $6,$45,<m share or a $15.7 million additional compensation award for 38 million acres taken from three Shoshone tribes by the federal govern- ment in 1868-69. 'Mlert M?re 2,128 enrolled Wind River Shoshones in January, and each is scheduled to receive $2 ,400 during a one- year period. That is in addition to 'their regular monthly payments of $50 each as a share of oil and gas royalti6 the tribe rectives from the nine fie\~ being work· ed on the reservation. For tbe Shoyos, the land-payment claim! mean $1 2,000 by next Jan. I. Then the payments stop. The land-payment checks represent more money than many tribal members ever received at one time. More im· portantly, the money represents a chance to get ahead. "We 're talking about putting a little ad- dition on the house and maybe filing the Indian Group insulation," said, Shoyo, who bu a good command of Engliah even though ht h:ls only 1 third-grade education. Shoshone ls spoken almost exclU!ively in hi.a home. "I use my work money for food , bills and the school kids," he said. "I'm going lo keep lhe kids' money in the bank and try to save most of ours, but it's hard to save for Indians." The Shoshones, 'll'ho share the reserva- tion in west-eentral Wyoming with the northern band of Arapahoes, reslde main· ly in the fort Washakie area. John Tidzump, another Shcl.'lhone 'll'ho lives on the reservation v.·ith his wife and three grandchildren, said he would use hi.s first land-payment check to pay bill!. "But the next payment we 'U try lo aave," he said. Clyde Hobbs, bureau re se rvation supervisor for J01h years, said he didn 't notice a great deal or difference when Shoeshones received their first land-pay· ment checks. "They paid biUs. bought consumer pro- ducts and many bought cars. Shoshones UPI Tl'-"911 Discrimination Cited In Sections of West WASHINGTON (UP I) -The American Indian Movement says racial discrimina- tion is rampant in lhe Dakotas, Colorado and Nebraska and has appealed to Congress to provide an Indian legal redress system. At the conclusion or 50 days of hearings in the western states, the group issued a statement saying it investigated 2,755 complaints covering "racial di scrimina· tion. mistreatment and mismangement and outright graft and corruption" in the Bureau of Indian Affairs at the area of- fice level. The bureau had no immediate com- Students Lose Request, 'Face' MILWAUKEE. Wis. (AP) - Custer has won his last stand - that's Harvey Custer. Indian groups wanted lhe name of Custer High School changed, contending it glorified the con- trove rsial Indian fighter , George Armstrong Custer. But the school board said no ehange was needed because the school was named for Custer Avenue which had been named for Harvey Custer, a local constable In the 1840s. mcnt. but a spokesman said representa- tives attended the group's national con- vention this month at Cass Lake , t.1inn. to hear the complaints. The group said the grievances alleged: -Rampart racial discrimination in the Dakotas. Colorado and we stern Nebraska. -Bureau offi cials within the Aber- deen. S.D., area office are stifling Indian programs and refusing t r i b a 1 governments permission to investigate miss ing millions of dollars earmarked for tribal use. -Bureau officials admittedly override and undermine tribal programs, thus ensuring failure. -The FBI refuses to investigate com- plaints against bureau officials. -The Public Health System on reservations is actually in disguise an ex- perimental field for young doctors. "We finally arrived at the conclusion that these complaints were heard 80 year9 ago and still nothing is being done to correct this system," said Dennis Banks, the group 's national di rector. Besides legal redress, the lndlans recommended that they begin a series of meetings with forei gn powers in an at- tempt to bring their plight before the United Nations. The group also recommended that C.Ongres.s intervene on the recent rulings of acting Attorney General Richard G. Kleindienst on the Yellow Thunder deatn that occurred in western Nebraska Allegedly at £he hands of/thrill-seeking whites. The Indians said tiey were refus- ed aid . Tea~her _Eyes New Image Cherokee Fears America.rt /1ulian Ste reoty ped CHERO KEE. N. C. (A P) -Faren Sanders, 1 beautiful :11-year-old Cherokee Indian, hopes to do wbat she can as a teacher to change the stereotype Image of the American Ind.Jan. "We don't 111 weir feathers In our hair, 11 says the atatuesquei modishly clad Pttl!ls Sanderw, a Junfor at the Unlver~ly or Georila. Her 1trlklna good lookl -Ion(, shining black hair; black eyes and hl1h chttkbones -won her U.. lop yearbook buuty award 1t the unJver1tty. Aller artc1u.allon, m. Jnt.ndod 1o ttach I Indian children. She is one ol 13 Ind ians at Cherokee taking part in the Indian Teaching Training Projec t. sponsored by the university, the Bureau or Ind ian Af- fair!! and United Southeastern Tribes. Miss Sander!I' home Is In Chel'('lket. nestled in the foothill s or the Grent Sm<lkles. The town also Is home or the eastern band of the Cherokeet. Deeply rooted in her native l11nd, Ptfiss Sanders aat on a bluff overl~ing the valley and said, 0 You can get the girl out ol the reservation, but you'll never get all • lhe reservation out of the girl." In lightfooted fashion, she leaped from rock to rock in the Oconaluftee Rive.r whieh meanders through her home town and In which she played as a child. The commercialism or the tourist-clut- tered sho ps In Cherokee offends her and Is partially responsible, she feels, for the 1tereotyped image of Indians. Proud ol being a Cherokee aiid well- 1tecped in Indian lore and culture, 1'tlsa Sanders Is transmitting lhla pride lo her pupils. I traditlooa:Uy meet tbelr financial obliga- llons," Hobbs uld ts Shoshones lefl their funds with the bureau to draw interest, while banks In the nearby nonreservation community of l.ander reported tribal members opened nearly Sli new checking and savings accounts ln the first week after receiving the checks. Although many Shoshones purchased a. variety of consumer goods, including BJ>- pliances and autos, busines.ses in Lander reported no major increase in sales. The long-awaited payments became a rea lity Dec. 22 wben President Nixon signed into law a bill authorizing the claims to the Wind River Shoshones. the Shoshone-Banndcb of Idaho and the Northwestern Shoshones in Utah. The three tribes had been bickering for more than three years about the funds, which were approved in 1968 by the In· dian Claims Commission. The tribes were awarded some $1.5 million for the lands in 1868, but filed claims for additional compensation shortly after World War 11. The Wind River Shoshones will d!!1r1bute BS percent of their $6,$-15,000 to tribal members with the other 15 percent going lo the six-member Tribal Business Council for use in Interior DE'partment- approved projects. The 35-15 per C"ent ratio is the same used for distribut ion of other tribal funds. •·or course, the people wtre very happy to finally receive the paymnts." said Lar· ry Murray, a Business Council membe~. "Some of the older ones had felt 1t wouldn't happen until they were dead." Murray, 30, has a \\'ife and five C'hildren-all tribal members. So the land· claim payments represent a substantial income boost to his ramily. J\turray has a master's degree in education from Chadron State Teachers College in Nebraska and is coordinator of Indian education in \\1yoming for the State Department of Education. "I'd rather have iny share of the land than lhe payment claims," J\lurray said \\'ith a slight grin. ''The government payments figure out to about 50 cents an acre." The BU!tness Councll will receive ap- proximately SI milliori as ill sb41.re of the claims payments and will use $750.000 of that to establish a tribal-run loan pr~ gram. For seve ral years, the Sho!:hones have had loan programs lhrough two ba~ks in Lander ,~·ith the tribe guaranteeing 80 percent or t!ac.h loan. But that hasn't been ent irely successful, as some. Shoshones feel not enough tribal members have benefited. "\Ve hope to offer attractive en.ough in· tercst rates to make it possible ~or persons to enter into business or build homes" said i\.turray. ''This will give th e Shosh~ne people a chance to build and the ultimate goal is not to make money.·• . The Shoshone Business Council also will use part of its funds for a land-purchase program . Individual tribal members own- inJ?; heirship land S?metim~ sell the prop- erty. which then lS held m trust by the bureau. The tribe then can purchase the land and lease it back to individual Shoshones for farming or ranching. 'Indian Power' Explored Leade rs Tell of 'New Br ee d' Enie rging in Ci ties DALLAS, Tex. (AP ) -A new breed of aggressive, power-sensitive American In- dian is emerging from the urban areas of the U.S. and ultimately will have a pro- found effect on the future or all Indian people, says the administrator of an Arizona reservation. "This new breed of Ind ian coming up is more aggressive and will have a great in- fluence on what eventually happens to In· dians and the U.S. Bureau of Indian Af- fairs." Ted White , a Sioux Indian who oversees the San Carlos Apache Reserva- tion in eastern Arizona, told a seminar at the American Psychiatric Association. The new Indian is coming from urban areas such as Los Angeles, Chicago, Den- ver, Dallas and Phoenix where Indians who left the reservation are con- gregating. These Indians are expressing their new-found power through a growing movement~for reform, White said. "These Indian groups have been heard and the reason they're being heard is the position they\·e taken on various issues,'' he said. Dr. Carl M. Hammerschlag, a U.S. In- dian Health Service cons u 1 ti n g psychiatrist in Phoenix y,•ho moderated the panel. said the federal government still is trying lo solve Indian problems by bringing the Indian into the mainstream of American society. "But the mainstream is where Indians drown ,'' he said. "The solution to the ln- dian 's problems in terms or your own in· volvement," he told the psychiatrists, ''is not to come to the reservation or buy tickets to the Gallup Inter-Tribal Indian Ceremonials. "The solut ion to these problems in terms of your particpation has to be in supporting Indian movements." Sen a tor's Wife 'I ndicts' P arties BEVERLY HILL..S (AP t -LaDonna Harris, wife of Sen. Fred Harris, (D- Okla.). says both Republicans and Democrats have oppressed American In· dians. Mrs. Harris, a Comanche Indian, told a news conference here that it doesn't mat- ter which party Indians vote for because both have contributed to policies that relegate the Indian to the bottom of American society. r...1rs. Harris was here to accept the American Jewish Committee's human relations award for her work for Indians' social and political rights. He said the "Indian power" movement hasn't paralleled similar movements among blacks because the Indian has a vastly different cultural background. "Iadian tribes have always been able to retreat to the protection and safety of their own reservations," he said. During a discussion period, however, Dr. Arthur L. P..1cDonald of Bozeman. ~1ont., said there still is a need for mental health experts to come to the reserva- tions to help Indians in the continuing struggle to cope with modern society. 1'No increase in the number of psychiatrists, social workers and psychologists is going to make any dif- feren ce in what is going to happen to American Indians int the next decade,·• Hammerschlag retorted. "What is going to make a difference is not our involvement but their in- volvement and some sense of the ir own perceived powerfulness. And that has to come from the inside. ··The degree to which 'il'e continue to come and give of our ser\•ices re-em- phasizes the nature of the counterfeit nurturance syndrome-that is. our ability to give and their neediness in having to receive it. "The way to deal with poverty and in- slitutional racism is not to send mental health services onto the reservation but for the Indians to become involved in the sense of their own powerfulness and to make some demands." Part of the Indian's problem is that he still hasn't been accep ted as part of the American scene, said Francis McKinley of Phoenix, he<td of the National Indian Training and Research Center. "\Vhile now we are faced with our de stiny, faced with out lives and our , , Ul"I Te ...... lo TWO 'CHIEFS' -Frank While Buffalo Man holds peace pipe he pre· scnted lo Sen. George McGovern (D-S.D~). left, on presid •,Ual candl- dal.cs arr1val in Portland. Indian Is member of Sioux Indian Nation and grandson of Chief Sitting Bull. children's lives, we still are mere abstractions that scholars very in· tellectually manipulate around so that we fit their preconceived t he or i e s, '' ~1cKinley, a Ute Indian , told the psychiatrists. In the past he said. Indian protest! about their future haven 't been heard ex- cept by the Bureau of Indian Arrairs. 1 few congressmen and those "interested in us only because we have remaining resources left-water rights. timber in- terests or mining interests-that they are looking at hopefully to take away from us.·· , But.. at least , that is changing, 1.-lcKinley said. "ln the last few years we have begu n to see that we are at least being listened to," he said. "We are beginning to reach that point when 'll'e are able to come out and say we do exist. we are around and we still have some rather valuable things to contribute to American society." Tub erculosis Cas es Hi gher A1non g lndia11s PHOEN IX. Ariz. (AP) -A 15-year medical study of 55.000 Southwestern In· dians released by the Phoenix Indian Medical Center shows 272 Indian cases or tuberculosis a year per 100.000 population reported against the national incidence of 32 cases per 100,000 population . The center studied medical records from Pima-Papago, Apache, Navajo, Hopi and ~1aricopa tribes as well as from smaller tribes in Arizona, Nevada. Utah and California. Cases of gall bladder disease and cir· rhosis of the liver also v•cre reported in great numbers. Indians studied showed only lwo cases of duodenal ulcers. a considerabl y lowe r rate than found among the American white male population. P..1ore than 19 percent of Arizona India n deaths were reported from accidents. Many adults were injured in horse 8C- ~idents and children were reported in- jured_ from p~aying with wringer-type washing machines. Meanwhile. Ed Cline, chairman of Neb~aska's qmaha Tribe. says unac- credited Indian hospitals show "a flagrant disregard for Indian health needs." Cline, said at a meet in" in Tucson of the executive board of0 the Nationa l 1:1'~bal Chairman ·s Association and of- ficials of the Indian Health Service that 21 of the nation 's 51 Indian hospilals are unaccredited. The IS-member executive boa rd repr,esents more than 500,000 Indians throughout the nation. Ne\v Life Give n To Claims Body WASHINGTON (AP ) -President Nix- on recently signed a bill extending the life. of t~e. Indian Claims Comm ission, which .or1g1na\ly was supposed to com· plete its work in J9a6, for live more years. '?>ngress passed the bill with re- auirements written in the House which H'>use Interior Commiltee Chairman "';ayne N. Aspinall. (D-Colo.), said are aimed at m~k1ng thlS extension the last. They nqu1re the commission to report ann.u~lly to Congress on progress toward deciding the last of the old Indian land and other c~aims before it by the April 10, 1977 deadline and to come back to Congr~ss each year ~ justify operating money. ne w Nixon Aide Swi tches EL CAJON (APl -A former national campaign chairman for. Richard M NI on says he ts supporun1 Rep 'J hX· Ashbro:>k for Ille Republlcan pr .. iden~I 'j nomination beca.,. the President ii: abandoned the party'1 11168 laU • '"I'm !till standJng on the pl~fon:'~f 1968, but President Nlton b not .. G YI nl B. ParklllSOll told ""'"""" Woct...:..b He said Aabbrook (ft-Ohio) "'P~· ,.!'; pliUorm. • • ... ~ """ • I Are You Letting Casr. Slip Through Your Fingers See If You Have Any Of , These Things A DAILY PILOT WANT-AD Will Sell Fast! I . Stove 29. Bicycle 57. Electrlc Tr1ln 2. Gult1r 30. Typewriter SB. Kitten 3. Biby Crib 31. Bar Stools S9. Classic Auto 4. Electric Sew 32. Encyclopedia 60. Coffee Table 5. Camer1 33. Vacuum Cleaner 61. Motorcycle 6. W1~h•r 34. Tr opical Fish 62. Accordion 7. 0 1Jtbo,,.,. M otor JS. Hot Rod Eouipm't 63. Slcis s. Stereo Set 36. File Ca binet 64. TV Set 9. Couch 37. Golf Cl ubs 65. Workbench 10. t:larinet 38. Sterling Silver 66. Diamond Witch 11 . R,,fri~erator 39. Victorian M irrer 61. Go-Kart 12. Piclcul' Truck 40. Bedroom Set 68 . lron•r n. Sewing Machine 41. Slide Projector 69. Camping Tr1iler 14. Surfboard 42. lawn Mower 70. Antique Furniture 15. Mitchlne Tools 43. Pool Tablt 71. Tape Recorder 16. Dlshw1sher 44. T ires 72. Sall boat 17. Puony 45. P iano 73. Sports Cir 18. Cahin Cruiser 46. Fur Coat 74. Mattress Box Spg1 1~. Golf Cart 47. Drapes 75 . Inboard SpHdboat 2~. 8-.rometer 48. Linens 76. Shotgun 21. Stam., Cll lltction 49. Horse 77. Saddlt 2~. D inette Set 50. Airplane 78. Dart Game 23. Pl1y Pen Sl. Organ 79. Punching Big 24. Bnwtin,:i Ball 52. Exercycle 80. Baby C1rri19e 2S. Water Skis 53. R1re· Books 81. Drums 26. Freezer 54. Ski Boots 82. Rifle 27. Suitcase SS. High Choir 83. Desk 28. Clock 56. Coins 84. SCUBA Gtor These or any other extra things around the house c:an be turned into c:osh with a DAILY PILOT WANT-AD so Don't Just Sit Th&re! D•AL DIRECT 642-5678 MOOtfl,f, •..-22, 1972 DAILY '1LOT DAll~Y PILOT WANT ADS The Bl99est Single llt•rketpl•ee o• The Oran9e Co .. t • Pho,... 84%-56711 VIRGINIA "Ginny"' MORRISON REALTOR announces the opening of her ov.•n office Suite 205, North Balcony 1500 Adams Avenue Costa Mesa, California Business: 557-4130 Residence: 540-2286 ·" and as her first offering she ha s a 3 BR 2 BA. rumpus rm, hdwd floors, Jrg corner Jot , all nestled in a beaut Hawaiian setting w /water- fall. Only asking $32,500. INSTANTLY APPEALING Is th1s "Conle 11 l t her }{oust'.'' II expl't'S~!I a freslmt"ss which you seldnn1 !!e{' on a cily lot. lt'l'i richly 11ppointf'd to d<'hi::ht lht' n1ost fastid1ot1s. Parnmounr vif'\\' of lla<'k 6/ly. just $47.S50. Call 546-23i1 ror an apooinlmt'nl. EASTSlPE COSTA ~SA DUPLEX Privacy! Pri1·nry! Each 1~ l - Bdrn1., 1 Balh. lneluded arf' Sto1•e, Refr1g. front Urur Cornpletely }'urnishf'd. Bo1l1 Units in Mol'e-in Condition. Enclosed GnragC's. $28,500. Call 646-0555, Evenings. 64&-5226. COLWELL· PROPERTIES, INC. REALTORS General Nothing Down! Desperate \\100·! !luge living roont \\'llh crarkting firl'plaer! Gour· mtt k1tehtn. Bu11t.1n~. Giant faniily room. '4 B<>drooms. 3 Bath~. Pi·1valf' door ('nil')' !\taster shill'. Only 360 mo. pa~·. Of S24.!! r\O 00\\'N PAYt\IENT: 7'"; ann ro r11tr. Q\1 nrr r .\1 1·rmrly an· x1nus! CA U. TODAY! 64.'"t-0.103. 'j lfRI.' 1 · 8il.\O\ '" R£A<-TOR~ BARGAIN e Shop 11 1 \\'1~s1rhff _'"' .. General A ftw of our Est•te Building opportunJtl11 Tl\:-; Shrltf'rs Inflati()n Hl'(!(:t'11 • 4 shlll"fl unitii -Pride of ownt'~hlp • t_:i,st Co11ta ~tH.a -10~ ckl\\'n • $66,500. * 8 BN>ad & Bultt'r urlits - Cosla :\tesa • 10•-: -S\06,50n. * 10 l/\'rl AC'r"~ -Paln1 Spr!nJ.;!1 • Pr111w Indian A~. front1u1;e -$20.000. • 45 Primt e1rrt' r111nrh - 11'3.dy for <lf'vt>loprnt'nl - E~ndido -Sl!t 750. Subinlt rrrn1s. * Ocenn front \f'Vt>I -1; plu,, arr(' -JUst north of th<' Nix- on Estate -$132,<XXJ. Inveslmt"nl Division 546-1600 e Ont' h!k IQ Irvine Ave. I O<ln'1 1111.~s' 111111111.<'., \1'1'11 -- r~1\'1Jrfl 1Nl. 3 bdnn. honlf'. I INVESTORS 'l 111·<1 for h0..1 t or Clllllpt'I'. ATTENTION Df'tut·he<l 2 C'af ll:flr. S26,\'+.i0. Try ooi:-; loan or \.f'I started tl011' on your assun1e present .FlTA . luture. Four units of thC' Gener el Gener el LEASE-OPTION ,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,' Unheard ~~~~J~~"'-hut hl't"ad and butter varicry that being high return an<l ha.vi' a lo\V VRl'an<'y !actor. 'l'early incomr-$6,540. T11-o bedroom units in ex~llrnl ('Ontlition, l.'Oppcr plumbing, M"p11.1·ate laun<lry room , plenty of ro~rf'd parking. Only $52,500 ir;tarts you en your \Vil)' wilh a limited do\\·n paymf'nt. /> / {) /) here it is, you1· op1)(lr!unily eJ..inda J${e to purchaS<' a srl1u·1ous '1 Tiu~ 1r('{'kend dr11·f' th t~ l\I"t'H PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT 57 L inda Isle Drive Custom 4 BR .. 31h ba. home on Lagoon. Mstr. BR .. has sitting area & frplc. Waterfront fa~11r rm. w /~on~.~!~~~~on .P.!.~--~rou1..1d the ·frplc.; love ly gai'lfen, lge. slip ..... $189,500 BR, 21,, Ba. hon1c 1n Corona dC'I Mar 11•\th a nr3rly i(\f'n· tlcal rt'n1al uni! r(lr an ab.~lutc m1nin1un1 i'litial investment. Prit:c redured investment. Price redu~d to $74,500. Call 673-8550. arl(I f1111I yourself choosing a hnn1c of beauty and d1sllnc· tion nC"xt to golf course 11.nd ;; n11nute:<1 lro1n the most brRutif11l btach in Southern California. lturry and J mean hurry! Only $36,500. All tern1s. Phone 847-6010. C. F. Coleswortfly & Co. Realtors EastbluU Office Bayshore Olflce -67f>-.4930 $2.500 Gets You In -No--fi,.iialifYlniJ For Complete lnformetien On All Homes & lots', p1 .. ,. Cell: * LARGEST ••.. i( ------- 1 yard in town! Corner 101. 3 Huge Pool Ass11me a 7~;. VA lonn on th\8 gorgcnus .'.\ bedroom \\1ith a SUJler la~e pool. lnw ma.intenan('f', hc!\ntiful lnndscap\ni:. liHJ:C qu1el c11rner lot 1tnri rinvatr len- 1·1n~. You'll f('{'[ like hv\ng 1n the rou:1try s1df'. l·lurry! ! C;1ll 8'12-25::5 No1\'! BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR BR, 2 ba .• lam. rm .. hli"'. STEPS TO BEACH 341 Bayside Dr., Suite l, N.B. 675-6161 Complete \\'/baseball field, I 3 BH. 2-sty. Recently decor. ""!!!!!!""!"'""""~""'""""""""""""""""""""""" ! S\~linJ!;~. piC'n1c a r f' as . nC'nr nr1v carp. Op:?n beam I ;,eneral $34.500. ! """~; largf' patio. tU.900. ~ '-»nerai BALBOA BAY PROP. CAYWOOD REAL TY ! -------* 642-749!__*--1 * 548-1210 * VIEW-Tl-FUL Newport \\lest \\'e urge you to inspect this \Valk to the beach from !his EXTRA VALUE A HOME FOR ENTERTAINING \:i>· THE REAL ·~ESTATERS truly lovely 3 bcodroom suJ)C"r J bedroom home \l'ilh f Would you believe 3 home in Dovl'r Shores with a large separate r R . bcd~ms, l 1~ _bath.<;, 11·al'.1111 a breathtaking vie\v of features lree 6 t u d de d paneling, patio, beautiful ocean & bay. 3000 sq. ff'el of private patio on an eversiz-back yard and boat slorai::e living area -outstanding aU ed 1.:orner )()t with storage art'a on Eastsidc only electric bit-in kitchen . for your boa! too. Spot]e!';s!y $27,950~ Well, there's one d'.p""'"~h·r . fo•mal d,.,,.,, · 1 · d •th d-·' available now. hut nol for \.. '"H'I • ,•,r1 • • • /'. home for t-nlerlainint; S.: family living. 4 bedroom. 2 , ......................... -.! bnlh. family MOm. e rll'oorator's <lream. no~ lo the beach. slip your bont and camper on the side of your home end begin cn- joyini:: life. Price only $39,7'.'il. FJIA/VA. Trrms. Phone R474i010. EASTS I DE SPECIAL ,,., .. ..., .. • _ main a1ne w1 upgra <:'I.I room, J\laster suite 11,ith ca r Pe 1 ; n g and lush long. Call Red Carpet drt'ssing room . Profession11.I 1· d · o I 133 500 Realtors. 546-8640. This 4 BR beauty is located Jn a }~rlendly neighborhood on a quiet 11t1-eet with a rountry atmosphere. Chlldr<!n & adult.I will love the area. Jl's been VA a~ pni.ised & it '~ ready to KC- Priccd at only $30,950. an scapJng. n y .. . landscaping-Asking $110,000. Call 842-2!>35 Now! Call 673·8550. SEX HAVEN VACANT FIXER UPPER Bedroom house, Costa Gorgeous Newport Heights. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, split 3 level. l\1irrors g a I 0 re . l\1esa, owner an xi o u s . Hillside location. Don't miss $22.~ lakf'~ it. Good ii! Red Carpet Realtors. n('i_ghborhoorl. Quiet. Sec it 54&-8640. no\\'! Red Carpet Realtors. EASTSIDE Cozy 3 bedroom home. Private, block "'ailed. lrC'r shaded backyard \vi1h boat gale. \Von'! last at $250,00. Red Carpet Realtors. 546-8640. TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD 642-5678 General 5'16-8640. BEAUTIFUL FOOL lmrnaculate home , 3 b<>rlrooms, harchvocxl floors, l!f'parP\<' laundry room . 0\\'nf'r ready to mnl'e. Red Carf)C't Realtor.;. 54&-8640. ATI~NTION INVESTORS Fixer upper. Unbelievable n1ess . Jots of work. Do ii youl'self and reap the ' harvest. VA repossession in "as i~" condi tion , Thoufiand~ und('r n1arkl!!t value. Call RM Carpet P.caltors for information. 546---8&:0. G :i:neral MACNAB IRVINE Fl N ER HOMES EXQUISITELY DECORATED 4 BR, 41> baths. FR. Unusual, exciting de- sign. Pier & slip for 50' cruiser, $169,500. Dave Cook 642-8235, PICNIC IN THE PARK in your own back yard. Beautiful spacious gardens -separate children's play are a -lovely 3 BR Mesa del Mar T-Plan. $34,900. DOVER SHORES Gorgeous atrium model -4 BR., 3 baths. Great entertain1nent home. Beautiful VIEW. $93,500. Tom Queen 644-6200. TWO BAYFRONT LOTS Illne ss forces drastic price reduction . Uti· lize e>1isting 8 BR house or demolish for 2 new baylronl homes. Gloden Fay 642-8~ for appl. Price NOW $215,000. '!'------~ Irvine Mac:n•b·h•lne R•llyComp•ny tot Dover Drive 1•2·1235 1144 M1cArthur 144· 1200 Newport h1ch,C1lllotnl1 t 211l REPOSSESSION $20,700 R-1, B-2 ZONED COATS .. V.A. owned -$26,000 area. Biggesl mess we've seen. But 3 be<lroom11, 2 lm.ths, you can'! lose. $15.50.00 total down, $182.00 total p.'lymenl, Buy it and save $$$. Red Carpet Ri!!altors. 546-8640. Over 1,~ Acrf' Land In Newport Stach. A prim<' localion for !he inrlivirlu1il who 1\•ants lo build or 10 . WALLACE REALTORS Get In The Swim Pool time! Sharp 3 lx:drooin. purchase and speculate. 2 bath, 5 yl!!ar old hon1e \.l'ilh Jloiv many 1; Arre Par~I~ -l4M141- {0pen Evenings) fai:iil~ room. lire.place. havf' you :;ttn in Ne\\·port I · ----- bu1lt -1ns, carpets and ura~s l.ntf'ly? $2'J.~. cal I D-OUBLE DUTY plus 17:t38 pool. Full pncc 6'16-0555, Ev<'nlnr.~. 64&-:.22G. Douhle Rcnuty: This lux· only $:'.:1.500 FHA IV I\ -~-urio1u1 fan1ily home h11~ !he tcrmi;.. can !!<!2-253.1 ·rflf!ay! I I II, -l'O~forl and ~timulo.tlon of --:: = _ design thal \\•111 unHe every • • • • • . memb('r of the frunl!y . and • . • • ~!Ill it segregates I h c ---oWNER-~ust 11 -.; children for 1heir pool side }8?·THE'.REAli. , ·ESTATERS " ii.:: 1 ,QPEN iJNTll ~PM• SUPER CLEAN se · oclivillc'-Lo co I'd In bedrooms, 2 baths, entry Pool homo w•'th 3 bedroom•. h 11 1 1 b . k 1. 1 Beautiful Glen Bar, only a ' na ura ric ii-ep are, $37,900. Call 546-2313 for ap- 2 bath, many cxlr11 s, in beautiful cabinet, \.l' or k polntn1C'nl . ri1 esa Vertie for nnly t 1il,500. lhruout, c11ston1 lrn.turc11. Red Carpet Real tors . rt'al prldcofownership, l'l<'w ~-~!!!I ;;: Money Now ~~~. ;;;::'"~·,k·~~,~~'. ~· 3 Bcclrooms. I~• baths, laun-POOL * DUPLEX * dry room, many upgradf'~, 4 f'~Dr.•.1 . _ CORONA DEL MAR lip-!op shaf)('. Yard ne<'fls \~'alk to rt~ brach work so houM? is pricf'rl 10 $23,900 -Ne De wn Vacanl . S6.l 500 save you SS$. Only $31.500. 4 bedroom:;, 2 .scp<>ratc CJIUCI-\ CAliOTlfF:RS Red Carpet Re a 11 ors. baths, builtin dream kit· REAL ESTATE 546-8640. chen. Lov<'IY putio. Enjc~· TREASURES CUL-DE-SAC Room lor boat, block wall fence. well kept yard. The 4 bedroom house i!I even he!· !er. $31.450. RN! Carpel Re:altors. 546-8640. the prxil. 5&0-1720 'TARBELt: Need a "Pad"! Place an ad! Call 642-5678 1831 Westclifl. N.B. 646-5152 BAYFRONT Charming 3 Br, 2 Ba. Condo. Poo!, pier & slip -$79.~. TEO HUBERT &: ASSOC. :wn Via Lido 675-8500 S@\\~lA.-~r..~s· The Punle with th" Built-In ClrucHe O Roorrange lello!'1 of tho ,-~'-..- lour xrombled words be· low 10 form fovr simple words I 1 r E' G r A' R '. I I VU CE R t 1 I I I I I' DOPET l f · I • I I I • One way of having the kitchen to your$e]f in the .---------.morning: T eke the coffee to 0 U 8 0 N A ~ ;n -. .I•u !--,,~,~,r-~,-~,-~,~c-1 O Compfolo th• chucltl• qvol.d ~y lolling In Tho l'l'!!ulng word1 _ yov d!!volop from stop No, 3 b.low. PRINT NUMBfRtD LETTER$ 1N I lHfSE SQU,,lfS f) g'!i'!~~~~ lEl,lUS TO I I I I 1N I I I l SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 800 I ' - .. ·'• • I ~~~~D~·-'.'Y __ P_''_o_r ______________ _,_M_,_,~dA):..M:·~·~n~,~1~9~7~1 ............................................................................................. ..,.,.,, ........ ~ Everyone Hes Something Thef Someone Else Wants DAILY . PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Can Sell It, Find Jt, Trad e It With a Wa nt Ad 'The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast-Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results I Houn1 lorSM• I~._! --·-·-__JI~ .__I -_·_· .... __,!~![ -·"··· l~ I _ ...... I~ r -'""" I~ Gen•r•I A UNlfJIJI: ti(),"f A PICTURE OF CONVEN IENCE , Close to the golf course, nearby the freewa ys and a quick run to lhe bc a<·h. '!'hat 's the advantage.s of thi ~ 2 bd rm, 2 bath lov; maintenance hon1c that i~ in immaculate condition and cute as a bug! Askin~ S4 t.rl00. PH ON( UNIQUE CORONA. DEL MA.A • /<'.l•t(J(;(J REALTOR , MU LTIPLE LISTING SERVICE. .,.,.,,,. HERITAGE ' • REALTORS * 4 UN ITS* Peninau la Point I :~ 1-Bch•m. & 1,_ brlrn1. I P..cntl'd month lo n1onth ; lu\v vt1.c11r~y fa(·lor. $.112.00IJ. ~ Alllllllll Cull : G73-366."l. 6 <12 -2 25 :: 1_ ... _ _c_ _____ ,,__~--~M E><* DUPLE X * IJoncr•I General Price Reduced $63,000 I-;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;' J'rf'slii.;1· Pcnio:-.ul:1 l 't, loc. ~I I• Btli'n1s.. t•ai·h unit. Attr 3 XLNT 5 BDRM. HOMES · We feel fortunate in having 3 outstanding 5 bdrm. homes to offer . They are much Ln de- mand & in short supply. Wide ranp,e of price & locations. Costa Mesa, Pierce 5t. $37,500. Upper Bay Dr. $62,500. Baycrest Hi ghland Dr., $78,500. Stuc·l'O & shini;I•' exterior, hll'J:,l' sundCl'k & r1.1t10 arca. Lo1\'Cr unit lu111ishetl. Dou. /Jfl' J.:;lfUJ.:f'. {;alJ: f,7'.;....:;(i(i;J !)·1~7J;j f'\l('S. associated DROKERS-REAL TORS l025 W Bolboa 67l-l66l .THE BEAUTY AND ELEGANCE of lhc country in thr ··i ty. T11·0 fl!'1'1"S O\'i•rlooking !hf' Bao ·k llay. Split lcvcl :i ht.•1lroor11 1101111·. bllill 10 lukr 1 full :11lvn11tag1• of !hr sur- Convenient parking -easy to be a "DROP-IN " at Bay & Beach Really 675-3000 : /'!Jllllding.'I. ~lnhlr"I, t'OITUI~. glonous 1.-..11 11·1th 1·n· 1 lcrta1n1ni: f1l!·1li111•s ;i 11 rl •·ahat\i'I. !lolling l<u1~IS1·11pi11t: 1vi!h ponrl nnd lount:un. J-;!llrtlf' ltV111J:':' H1 its hf'sl! lilt BAY & BEACW REALTY m \II••~<. '••I ~•t10t •ot• \~C l "' ~~!.~,1-642-5678 I for Action • • General CORONA DEL MAR DUPLEX Call ror 1Jcl11il.~ n '1 d bruchun'. A PETE BARRETT -REALTY- 642-5200 ........................... _.; * Adult Condo. * Sparkling <'k»ul :1 lxlnn .. 2 baths, trg, liv 1·111 . w/frplc .. rl1•1·1ri1· kitel1. p ;1 t i o , s<'pni'nli-c•r1rranc1•. Pool. pull ing Rr<'cn. badminton, shufflehoard. ~lust sec to npprerlate. Only SJS.000. Gener•t -SANDPOINTE- FOUR BEDROOM All wrapped up in this nice T\VO STORY 4 bedroom, 3 bijlh, HUGE HUMPUS HOO~! that will take a pool table. bui ltin kitchen. large yartl will accommodate your 30 foot boat , a nd a spacious feeling prevails thru- oul. VA, NO Down .... $39,900 . -HARBOR VIEW HOME- SOMERSET MODEL FEE Stretch-out and li ve in this two story 5 bed- room, 3 bath, FAM ILY ROOM, DINING ROOM, Buillin kitchen, fire pl ace, NEW CAR- l'ETS and DRA PES pl us so many ex tras you have to see it to really apprccie te it. m.soo. -CORONA DEL ~AR- SOUTH OF THE HIGHWAY Apartment unde r construction. Make the changes you want NOW. 3 Bedrooms. 2 baths. builtin ki tchen \vith VIE\V OJ."' .JET- 'J'Y. FRONT HOUSE -also has 3 Bedrooms, 2 baths. builti n kitchen, din in g area, fire- place. Now is th e time to bu y . . . .. $79 ,500 TWO TRIPLEXES -CORONA l>lo_L,MAR::::, -·" Buil t in range and oven, dishwasher and disposal, carpets and drapes. 2 Un its ha ve 2 bedrooms, 1 bath: 1 Unit bas 2 bedroom s, 11f.t baths ,.,, /fireplace. Each un it has 2 car· ports. maintenance !rec yard and pool privi- leges. , ... Each $79,500. FOUR BEDROOMS -CLOSE TO BEACH- .Short distance to beach and golf course. FAM IL Y ROOM. used brick fireplace. 2 baths, builti n kitchen, close to shopping, schools. Jr. College & freeway. Try your VA or conventional .................... $31,500. ~ IJIO A.S.'SIXIAIES REALTORS 644-7270 2121 EAST COAST HIGHWAY CORONA DEL MAR, CALIF. Balboa Peni nsula Fountain Valley * PALERMO* 11 ELF:CANT BA Yt•ltOt\T • $24,500 Rrlurl.u•IW!I 19TI. Panorarnlr GOVERNMENT ,;"'" '"'"''"·'BR.'"'· 4 BED RM. + REPOSSESSION °'"''Y"'d '"">"· 11"':"" POOL' Harbor Vl·ew Homes . ~1arsha1 1tea11s (jj~GOO • I Just t'f'lC'H.St'd F:asl~n.fr· < u·ll . 2 8-h -., bath' fnrn1ly r0run1 11"ith · h .1 I I COZY PC'n point r 111 ~ • I ~lesn hon1<' 11111 . M rrns.. ' · , ' . B , t'le ·arn S11·1•1hi;h r11·rp nl'r, Outs!nn(.hn:; \'all(')' ViCll' ''"' ·'·•n hritk fll\"'l)IR('l'. 11/!lbl gar, p.1lio, bllin _a) .f::1 b . k 1,,,,,.,1, r i«h . u.. , 67:>-ffijj aft J & USC! I'll' • ~ A larnll~ hon1c 11·h1ch can I shaK crplll, lillln k1teh('n. 2 & _P.c-1~. onr. ' \l'uod pant'hllg, c:11'nt fnr double in large grou11 cn- 1 hath5. Jlugf' Jor \I 1lh ttc1;1C"h· i\•knib. ""•II-Jn kit-. · -4 1... Bd ---t•nte1ta1n1ng, u tcrtainrng, ~r. . nn.~. cd :; r::ir garn11:e-11·1rh 111un1-Bays hores rhcn. ihswnshf":r. "('\\' !ihag All 11 llh lht> llahun Jt1v1eru IJ1no J'rircd at SZi.001. nnd . Bk. 11·1'-l"'iGI 1nlluent·r. 011·nrr has spa red · aski~ only SlOO:I. •loirn. 3 BR., 2 E:i. .. din rni. t·ust. cnrpet1ng. 1• -· nothini:: in cost In con1 plet(' I Call us inimffiiat('h . iron 1 crpt shultrrs & drp!~ F.!cc l/<o". Jo"n• hon1c "· now it has I ' kit Loll' Lsr. holr!. 6i'.)..-Oll40. TARBELL ·' " "' last a 11·P.rl; 011tgT01\·n him. Call to v1l'11•, 546-~-.~ 10iM'n ('\'l'~ 1 CapistraM-Beach-- S62.!'50. f.t a1otno!in nl ·rn11i~_.11, Waterfront Pier ON£ Ycar old ~ RR, :! BA.j __ _:•,:"o::'"::''':c''.-' C"v--"'-''=-'-cc I hi:;:h ceiling5, orC'an 1•ie11 · GREEN Brook Hninr. F.V. 4 ~;:;;;:;;;;:=;;;;i iT~akj;'~o~v~o~c~lo~a~n.=%~•=·=i~~3=:;·:::: Bdrn1., 2 Bil., la n1ily A11d I Custon1 duplC'X. N t' 11 p o r t C II P k dinin~ r'flOnl . Singll' JilOry. J ~lnnd ..•. This is a h<'aut. O ege ar "'"" n211 I \\'Cll·k('pl property. Lot~ of --* SMOG * _B_y_o._·n:r::~_,,~ __ ·_. __ pride )11 (J\l'lll'l'shiJI. 011'111'\' " BR. 2 BA. Oft rn. $28 900 1vil1 c<11Ty !st T.D. loan 11·1th * FREE * ~ BR. 2 B,\. P.R. Ult. 1 m loan <.'Osls. Of!f't'Cd at Only :.11 ~ lilo(·k, lo lht' h.-·ai·ll. ,i !~!:, 2 BA. FR. !'(J(JI, 4 BEDROOMS ~ ~ 1 ·r~ '' B \ l'P. ~1irl11•r Sll2,0CKI. Near 11c1v ,, !it'dt'oo1n. :.I hr.th " ',. -'' . '• '-·-.. ~ No r1o11·n. 0.1. tE·nns. Jo111·!r CORBIN-''"'''" -011ncr 1n•11·rd 111 Call (,t•f>l'\!c' ~il'ZC'I, ,).J/-l:li;... r ., . I ',. ,,.,,h u " · . .. l . 'IG-~:\l \ lat).:t' ;1n11 ~ i1 n, th1•n transll'rrr1! F\'l'l""O!lC F:d. /{lfldl(' nt '1 r~. {; ' ' . I ,. la . I • ' " ,. ' ' · -~ ---f' l').!R!ll 11 t'll , l(' l ' " MARTIN qu11l1hl's ro assun11• 1011· in· Corona del Mar hulltin kitehen. dish\1·ash<'r, ll'rest loan. $257. prr n1onth rii·h \l'OOl.I paneling. \\/ired inclurll'S 1asC's 11·ith mini· * MODEL tiOME * for strrro. P:ltio. Prime 1 REAL TORS 644-7662 mum d01l'n. Bel!t buy in Pril't' rf'ducOO to S--Mi.9:iO. Fnr IOC'ntion. Bkr. 962-1.rr.t I UNCUT GEM I Cc,',,Jl~~~a84no2'Beal·h -S.33,950. quirk »all' or las! hon1f' 1n .,...,. ., !OpPn Ev<'s.J CQunt1·y Cluh )l:inor - JI:< BP.. \\'ell built older &autiful l'if'I\' of S.1nl;1 Ana TARBELL llfJme nr. Ne111>01t llelghts, on H-2 Jot "'/Spa.cf' lo bu~d. Alley acccs~. Sl 9.500. ROSE COTIAGE \outh,,. (~ oast Country Cluh. Crpl>, drp~. lndscpd. block 11·all. 6 '~ in- lcresr. Open hoU!;t' ~al. & Jl®t4 Brooklu1rs1, J•ountR1n Vallry Sun. 12'.'1 The i\!a.~1rr~ ('11Tlc. rOI{ salr by O\l'rK'l" :l 13f:fr. 2 ---------Ph: :~m--:i:1.J.'1:or6--l~~fiHi. Bl11h. Sha!:' r.ir'Jlf'I and I:? BR. home ncar Newport I SUPER DUMP.. V ACANT & READY l~aut 1f11J landst:H)ll lll;'. All II c i g ht s . l.nr"f' k1I. 1 / 1· h " • Sharp 2 Bdrm honic bu 1J1i11s in« l!f 111;: Ir .11 s \1'/brkfst. rn1. :'i'.?2,900. $20,500. * Neiv paint in & out 111a.~ll!'r. ·n11.~ I'" ~f'nr old POOL This has got lo be the best of * Ne11• plush sha:: crpl housr hA.~ llf'r n appr11ist'll .111 NEWPO~J:-~.~A.CH all fi.lf:er-uppers. Bring your * Ne\\I drapi>ril's $32,000. That's our price. !'J~O lrJeal hon1e in pri111e Ji11rhor boot.~ & shovf'l. 3 btlr1ns .• 2 * 1~00111 for another un it <low n plu.~ i1npou1xls. Call Jlighlands. 4 spacious BR, 1 ba th s, holl'.o; in th!' \rflll ~. S45.500. lull pri!'l' :>j7-5217 or SJ~l-128 11fle r fnm. rm., 2~1: b<i. Kitrhrn I broken \1•indo11•!1i f!IC. ThC' *FULLER REAL TY* _6:.'lO or all ttriy S.it. & Sun~ bltns, cpt/drps & a spark!-best patt is the location .and 546--0814 ............ Anytin1l' BY Q\\'NEH. 4 Bit. I·\ HA. in1t hid. pool. S44,000. 1 do11•n payment· ~nly $1,~. LUSK BROADMOOR-fan1. rn1. :i;hag tpt.~ .. 1800 l CALL "=" '"•-1414 ' Unrlr Sain 011.·.ns. It tl/lfl ":JI] OR HARBOR VIEW? S!]. ft. s31,:,oo. 96::.21-Mi ar ~.,, S('l l to any investor. For \\If' hai·e l'hoicc li.~t uigs 1n 121:'0 :?i9-6721. 1 Mdcv / sto~~rh~;.i.,~s10ont~·-. lhesc thrtt areas, front 2 to HuntfngtOn-Beach I REALTY .,..,....,,,,.,., pen f'\f'!l.f :; bedroon1s arnl SOIJI(' l\"i thl ---;;.. _____ _ Nt•f Ntwpo rl Po1I O rflt t Halecrest 3 BEDROOi\f. 2 ba1h, llARD- \\'000 Ooor homC', with added family rm 11·/builtin B-B-Q. Newly painlt'd and flf'('p shag carpeting. VA BUYERS OK . $27,500 ' Newpart •t Fairvi ew ~f'> HERITAGE "• REALTORS NO DOWN NO COSTS The O\\'tlCNI \\'ant out! 4 oulstandtng vie~·~. 0 u r popular pr1Cf'S rangf! lro1n S:J.l),!"iOO to ss~.:ro. Call 61;,..m1. COLWELL PROPERTIES, INC . REALTORS · be<lrooin. 2 bii !h home on a =""'=='07~~~~~, J::oo<l te!iidenth1I ~trcc t. *OCEAN VIEW* P . . I ,o7 "'o 1 Sha17> duplex; So. of lll\·y. 2 JJlC ony ·~~ ,1,,.., anc 5 . BR h 0 12 O\Yner may pay all your pac10~ . 1>ac • nr 11· , 1 C 11 847 ""IO f . baths. } .A. heat. OJWn bC'an1 c os~. a .....,.., or in ·r 1 1 forn1a!lon, Today! t:f'J s., sep. aun( ry rm. Copper plumbing. Very cll'an & I blk. to !he bcath. All !his fo1· S75,000. 4 BDRM. -$24,950- HEAVY SHAKE ROOF landscnpc• ar11st's t'On1c 1.ru<'. trees. f'Olorfu l shrubs and fl o11'f'ts. 2 pullman barhs. Dr I u x " buiHin k1h·hen apphanres, clisl11\'ashrl'. liu.t:" lil'ing room 11 i1h insp ir i ng firrplarr . full dining room P;i!ln. ~rrinklrrs. Bk r , 9(.1..,q,'iilj,-, 1.-.:)·THEREAL \'"\. ESTATERS 6-46-8811 MORGAN REALTY ... '"'t'<, r,-.L • >'r•. TARBELL (anytime} riiliimmlilililiil 673-664~ 675-6459 Hanlllton ""!fiiii!!iiii!!iiii!!iiii!!!!!ll!!!!!!!!!!!!!' I !ARBOR VI 1:-:\V I! ILLS &. Brookhurst, Jluntin,t:lon &h. 3 BR. & den, :J bath studio apts . \.Valk to beach, shops. schools. lO"'n Do\vn . Q\v ner will carry 2nd . $79,500. F'ront unit for rent, $395. LaVera Burns CALL ANYTIME 646-3918 ar Eve. 646--5649 '! TRIPLEX By 011'11cr. 3 Br. 21,; Ba. l~usk l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!Jl!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!llll!!!!!l!!!I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! FIRST HOME? 1 Very nice 3 BR, 2 BA 01vner"s home. 2 frpls, Yam. rm, . COOL IT General General unit + 2_2 BR 1 BA. Good dining rm. Occanvit'll. in your 011·n nool eo mplf"lt HUNTINGTON HARBOUR 4 BR 3 Da .. fa in, forn1 . din .. 2-sty .... ~54.800 4 BR 3 Ra., super custo1n, "REST'' .$68 .000 3 BR 3 Ba. \\•ater frnnt \V/dock ...... $87 ,500 Expert in area! See these. N Fink READY FOR SUMMER The \velco1ne mat is out! Sparkling brigh t. newly decor. & cnrpeled: 3 BR .. lge. fam il y r1n . In Bayshore:-. private bay beaches. $46,950. Morr Ilorvcy IRVINE TERRACE SCOOP ! Ju:;t listed this charmer l".:. it 'von't last loni::! 3 sn .. 2 ba 's .. forn1a l on . spacious ram. r111. \V /loads of bi t-ins. Coz;' patio. SS!l,750. M. C. Uuie BA YCREST BARG AIN l~nioy fan1 ily li £e to the fullest. Oe si.encd \rith i\1olher in rnirid. </uiet street. 4 BR .. family & dinin.l!. nnon1 for pool. $i2.500. Mary Lou l\1nrion BEST ijU Y -EASTBLUFF 3 BH , 2 h:i. t'h;irtninl! ho1nr. on c11I de :;;ir. P rof. decnr . l"-1.1n<l~r:ipin~. ~\n,·e·in cond. Won 'I l:i :;t al lhi-. price ! S41,000 . llarricll 1);1\'ic ... VAC ANT LOTS . BAYCRES T 1. T~Cf'\\'ilrd -lt'l' lot ~;)tl,!'>00. ()\\'Ht:'!' \\'il l trudc for hon\f· to :-:i l00 .000. :!. llu.[!c lot on c::il;ix~·: arf'a or fine homes. $45,000. l·:ugcnr \"rl•clnnd CAM EO SHORE S I. OCF./INFIH\N'i' ·I Ill! . 5', ba ,: smma , pool. $340.000 2 .. Jett.v \'iC\\. pool. ti lil t ri 1 : b:1 . librar)'. playrootn. :0:::.!2.0t10. 1 »1rn11'~111111 65 ' ON BA YFRO NT r hoicc lot. on peninsula. !');ind,\' IJC>ach plus pier & no:i1 ff'lr !:tree bo:1t :-i1:1tl·lv natio '.!n- trilnre l<l lhi:; lo\·cly Ii HU . 4 hnth hon1c . S350,000. 1·:d1c Olson • BAYSHOR ES Ton corner lcw:ation. 2·Stv. 4 Bit 3 Ba. 11ror. der. ho1ne. Lge. instr. suite on 2nd level\\'/ dress in_g rm. & stu dy. Jlomc surrounded by lovel y l::a,vn & trees. $92..500. Kathryn Raulston ~ Coldwell,Bmlker IJJ-0700 644-2430 ~ .llO NEWPORT CENT ER DR ,, N.8, I -I I Lachenmyer Realt or · --WATERFRONT $95,500 J llcdroon1s !could bf' lour! in r.fain I lOU!!f' wilh nnr bc1I· roon1 eo!tni::c In !1"0111 . 011 lhr c·hn nnrl Cu1laJ.;r rr n!s ro1· $.'IOO n1on1h. Nrw dl"rk 111•1•ot1101lnh's boat up 10 39'. <.:1·ear pn!io.~ with 1•1u·h house rn1· II 11!rrsi1'1· lh>1ni::. Call h~!i-il7! --.--;; ~~N;;-! OPEN HOUSE Sat. & Sun., 11-3 2422 S, Rt nt Or., S,A, IS. o[ \V11rnc1·, \\!,of Br1slnll } UR., 2 Balli, firrph1cr. ~'P· 1lin1ng rrn .• S('rvi1•1• :u~·;1 u1- s1rlr. 2 ··ur i.:11rni.:r, llu1H-ins, '"'l\~·I d!'llfX'S in lllKSlf'r hl'>cl- rnn111. 11 111 1·;irp.:·1.~. spr111k- l•'t'.'\ 111 lr11111 ,Just l'••p;1in!('cl I l11.~1rlt•. t'lusl' lo air ~1'11001.~ :ind 111inu1t•s '1~1111 ~. Cria11t l'h11;a & 11\aJor ~hopping. S2S. 7!'ill. Suh11111 all tr nus. 011•ncr 11·i!J Jlfl.11 /\LL ~·ln~iny, t'0!!1l!. 1-'nr niot·t· 1nfu11un!ion, cnll X:t'l-:'1261 !iffiw1· :i jJi'il:-- LI DO ISLE SUPE R BU Y Jusl n•1•1u·prh•d ;: B1'1ll~,1n1~ & :: tiarh~ On \'111 \\'111.U't'~ 1'1n•:l1• ,..:101'~· l~•11u• l'n1·ar.· l'ar111 fnrn1:1I 1!111111:,: n1nn1 Thr Best B11,1 "ll l.ido, al SG.1,500 1tEA1;ron~ Sl ~'l'E l~·H 673-4400 MESA VERDE t 3 1Jcdroon1 2 hnlh. trtt lined I Cui-dt-Sar tip lop cot"lUUon -------------------$18.000 location. $69,;m f,~":_2i·t~ 11·i1h 1vatf'rfa!J. This J Bed- * * * * * * A LOT !'OR LITTLE! Per-roon1 t•usromi:r.ed homf" ft>a· fer! starter home 111ilh bi,. $51,500. HARBOH. Vll·:\V HILLS -lunos knotty PllH' bonus ., Lusk <Carmf'll 4 Br, 2 Ba. T living room. Dining rooni. --rani rm lrrlc. pool sz Joi. room. ll 1ron·1 la.~! at $34.950. AYLOR Co. Cabin kitchen. Quiet sllttt. Roy McC ardle Realtor Prine O~ly. $6.~.SOO. &14.0isg GI T('rm~. Boat door thru back ot gar-1810 Ne1rfl0rt Hl1·d., c.r-.1. ZERO $$ DOWN age. \Valk to shopping, Close 548-7729 Casta Mesa S;,o total rlosini;:: rosti; to HARBOR VIEW HOMES Adorabl e :tl'Ionaco model! Bea utifu l landscap- ing, Sharp 3 Bdr m. & formal dining. Private rear yard \vith fru it trees. $49,500 EXCLUSIVE LINDA ISLE-$250,000 Bayfront beauty \Vith 5 BR. fa mily rm, game roon1 & 4 bath + po,vder rn1 . You must see this prestige home \Vhich incl ud es a multi- tude of custon1 features. Very luxurious. "Our 27th Year" WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 211 1 San Jaaquin Hills Road NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910 Daily Pilot Classified Ads for Action ... Call 642-5678 ' General CLOSE OUT $40,250 Th e Racquet Club in Irvine has one home a vailable because o( a last minute cancel- lation. This til ed roof beauty features a two .,story living roo1n \vith a floor to ceiling fireplace and massive exposed beams. Three bedroom:; and three bathrooms. l~arge fa1nily room and a co zy dining room. \Ve are including block '"all fencing and additional carpeting as an incentive for YOU to buy this lovely home. Located ju.t one block to park and tennis courts. Liberal lerms and immediate occupancy. Located on Culver Road, no rth or the Santa Ana Freeway. Open d•ily from 11 .. m to 6 pm (except Friday) 832-5792 or 979·2113 lo beaches. Very small do~n Vet on lar~r 3 bedroom. to qualified buyer! C1JJ no1v 1 :~~:! Dream Ho1.1Se \\lall 10 11·a1J t·ar~ls and -643-0303. · -Special drapes. 1-:i:ctllrnt neii:;hbor- • Spanish Adobe • Noiv you can buY her !hat tum. P:1ymcn!s lrss lhan ... $22.950. ~rrarn house because this is SK~ BLUE WATERS Solid built J bedroon1, double ii. 4 hu;::e 0Cclroo111s. 21 ~ lux-urious hat h~. lots of f"Strl' and a i::rcci! .1 Bf'tiroomi;, la.I. car garage, closr lo to111n & " / JI 1 c room, Pres1i"I" modfll 11·itl> Ja 1 Loinc. an al! hr yours ci1y park. Priced rii;ht. Ph: " r '27 ',o I llRISI L Ol '10\ '" REAL iOl'iS 642-1771. ankle tll'ep i.::.rprts thruou t, or ~ ,.!'N, Ir.~ really a fan. It Rarely Happens drapes to n1aic1i. 11 t1gc 1as11r huy~ Ontu scpnratr ran1i1y room. SHERWeeo REALTY But \\'('have just !isled fix> ~nJ'21 Trade in tha1 ol~ rn cx!ct on 18964 Brook1111rst , r·.v. prrf<'('t c:ombinalinn -A ,,, · ---~-'pacious. charmin"'• homt' lhis $'19'500 i<pt'.'einl. &lier POOL HOME' \1'\U consider all offl'rs. Call • 11·ith a 1·it'1v that is truly $27 400 1u1<'iccelf~ an}•••here -f'our , ,...,,...,.,... ...... .,....,.,.1 ' - l><'drooms. J baUu. J>'nmily 1 ·---------No Down n oon1, Large prof~sionally CO~LEGE PARK Rra.ltors ;y1:-,.g.iu1 terms. Load!! of cletking, landscaped yarrl with ~pace BottJ£'1' in lhe pool, \11hat a 2790 Harbor Bll'd. at Adam6 be11utifut S\\'ini pool, ii·ilh !or pool. $79,900 Ca 11 mess! Tenant moved out & Open E\'es. slid' ~r ~"· 1 •. . . · , ,...,., • ,, 1pn1en .,. 6~ for a vic11'ing .ap-the O\.\'nf'r (11·ho h1·es in MESA Vrrde -3 Br_ 2 Ba & vacuum. All c I I I pointmenr. Palm Springs\ says "get r id Fam fllear park s"hl. "Aii•a-'.. ""'"//.· ','., hr ' l-CLOSE-TO-BEACH- 2000 SO FT S BR+ DIN RM $34,500, 2 s1ory hon1e in .>:Int ;irca. .fo'ircpiatt, formal dining l'001n, 2 ba!hs. bl!ins, huge screened in patio. Needs so1ne 1Pnder lovi ng care, but 11•hat a buy! All te.nn1 a\'ailahlr .••• Cnll 847-1221 • 17141 Brach Bl\'d ., 11.B. ' f hit/. •"'V I&' • . •Ls, •u in 1cen o t a 11n11:. aean · in s hopp ing . N r 11 1 y rull dining morn. King !iiz.ed need of TLC: Could . be a n'dccorn.ted & ~ha:;-f'rptde. hedroon1~. Brk, ll46-0004. &auty. }"ix ~t & sal'C. · · 12 x 24 alun1inurn rn1 off s~.GOO as IS. Ca.ti 00111 brk -Pl&)·hOUS(' in back ri.1r.-2:11:: yard. By 011·nf'r. 5-16-3!.",J TARBELL BYo"·~Lo\·eiY:i-BR. fpL. cot lot. rm for boR!. 5824 .\r. EtlingPr, can1p€'r 283.:i Portola Dr. _Hunt1n~on BParh 546-1031. ABANOONt:D, DIRTY Ir unLE RANCH ~1 ESA VERDE, "'f'1i krpt 4 Cl lf:Af' -011•ncr "'anl1 /3 acre, 1.oncd R-2 cute lit-br .. 2 ba .• Im rm. Ls::-yd & out ~ Bring paint & broom tl@ house, country setting, patio. Lush cpts/ttrps & clean up -and rent out fo; old fa6hioned front porch, mo~! $48,9:i0 Own r . xtra mon!hly tn{'{)me. As- all for SZl ,950. Take a look. 5.J7-8i9t sumablc loan Sl8L pe.r Rcrl Carpl.'t R r a 11 or !i . NO DOWN TO VETS month. DREAM HOME : BR., 2 b•. Q""' """"· Robe.'.t!_& ~o:_ 962-5511 &At !!paCt'. J\'car IN!f'llllY & SALE by Oll'llC!T. a yr old. $27,000. shopping. $29.500. Hurry! ln1n1m;i(', 1n111ri!' & out. 3 ~ hrrl1'(11)1llll, 2 hath!!, fan11Jy -GEM Bl!. 2e,,, f'o\"f'n"d patio. ........... -. .......... 1 roon1. fir!'pltll't'. double .i;:ii r-. • 8Upt'r T'M'1l:hborhoocl. :? min. I FLOWERING agf', shakr i;hinitlr. mol and ir:to \\ · f_?Rst l h~·y., r.i .R. In bt·h. Blllll~. 'Pl'lnkler great n?sidcntial location. REAL~~ 642~ ft'plc, ~ttlc.-t rond. !IGS-23)3, I OflCHID TREE Mod'! horn• """" ""'" MESA DE L MAR >lit\! EJ.,_o/~Jh Ln ., H.B. · Nov.• in !WI bloom stl!t oft cntf". but, "Oh, 1vhet a bar-Auumable 5~'1:. Comple:ltly $20 9001 1hls btautUully landscaped gnin." Suhmil :'IU terms. rtr)Ovated. Top cond. Milli}' 1 • lhrff bodroom Mesa V<"1• C.U >15-M24 !OP<n EY<•l xlra.•. Lrg 4 BR, 2 ba, fam. SWIM POOL home, Spacious family room ~-$36.500, Principa1a: only. Live a lite: of c~ In thli wHh fireplace, tun buill-ina 545-7885. cozy • •ttrftctlvt home. 11nd handy service porch. -4 BR -CUI dt llac GCN"nius 117.e<t ~ms. 2 l2x30 covered patio, shag By o"'l'ler. $37.000 acpnrate be.1h,, all r lectrk? carpets and Jots of c:-ctraa. '"ard "'/trees 6Ta-6611 hu!IOn kllchPn. full dlnl'-f 1-Ull pri{'(' $30,950. E.\:t'fllcnt 81ck lav PLUSH 3 BR. 21~ BA, latte l'OO!n. P•lio. ('.nl"!l('(>U!I M\l\a trrnu1, of cou~. Ju.~I llstcd ·----'------! "'"''''• 1 d rec room.· 1\'t'f bar. Maey · C"UJJ om rapes. -hurry. VIE\V ot hll11 and UCI. 2 extra1! $34,500. 54()..}761 . Bkr, !£:! :;.;-n,, Call ~10-1131 ropen E'vrs.l Slory, httAmcd ttillng-4 Br , -&\1·\ng Uni, frplr, /~lot -Fountain Vall•.Y'---- lo11' lax. $38.00'.l. :,~9946-5 Or & 3 ba. Henltd pool. ., ;,, .. HERITAGE TARBELL For lb.at item under ~. F'rplc In :\19stC'r BR . Alldm!I ' ~faanotla, try the Pr.nny Plnc.ht'r :14.::'.::·000.:.::.._!l&'-:.:.__:l:!S5 __ •_n_6.;p:..m_., ---"".:""=;-:!::::::.;Bc:::::h __ 1 "1n1ou1. For Ml" by o•·ntr. 12&,!l:i(J,, !Ir. down. 546--!llt ll!!!!l!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!ll!!!!ll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ll!!!!ll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!I! , • REALTORS $30,9901 SPANISH Suptr lharp home on oountry qulet cul-de-u c stret>t 4 bedtoon1s, 2 hath5, family room "tith Ureplace. plush dtep p1!e carpetina:. dtapes d~uxe bullUn kitchen . d1sh1.1•asher . Patio. Sprinklers. "'lllk 10 all schools • neu shoppin& too' Brk 842-6691. TARBELL 16111 Beach Blvd., Hunl in.gton Beach VACANT 4 BEDROOMS+ POOL ,. $22 ,500. Near new \\'/W crpts., 2 bath area&, blt1n rA ngto: & oven. washer &: dryer. Sharp rO\\•nhouse In n1C'e a.rea. All terms. Call 8.!7-1221. 17141 Beach Blvd., ll.B. MODEL HOME Drive by 6062 Rosemont. Prestige area · So/\Varner, E IS pr i n g d a l e . Prof. lndscpd. nr. sch! & shop- ping. I' 1\IJge Real Estate 531-5800 I ::::1 531-5BOD Low, Low Down )Iutimum down moves you into th11 lar&e family nn home. 3 Bdnns. .2 batha. Full price only $2S,500. call no11-. 1t \\'on't 111~1: REAL ESTATE FAIR (714) 536-2551 NEAR Beach • Elto:gant 2 BR. din Rm., crpts, -drapes. Maul. }Td. Excel. Cond . dt.h/\\'lh. enc pauo., lrg. bf'au l. yrd. Excel. Cond. 121.500. 962-n94. $50. DOWN 2 Bclnn , }\~ bath Condo, freshly painted. Carpets, drape!. \\'asher, dr y er , retrig:. $18,450. Call 96&-4441. CREST REALTY DIVORCE DESPERATE O\\'NER -4 Bedrm, 4 Baths. fam nn v.•/ Ip!, fonnl din, like ne1,1•. As- sumto: VA l'>an. Quick poss., nr bch. U .S. AFFILIATED Brokers Rto:alty $ Instant Cash $ tor your equity. We pay costs. 24 hr. 1erv. 847-8507' U.S. AFFILIATED Brokers Realty REPOSSESSIONS For lnfonnation and location ol these FHA .. VA home&, oontact - KASABIAN 147-9604 Real E1tate ASSU~IE fllA LOA~ 4 BR condo, crpts, drps, relrig. Small dO\l.'l'L. Paymts lesr. than rent. Bier: Eve, 963-2941 or 968--0410. Irvine A RARE FIND 2.story. 4 Bdrm., 3 ba., 3 car gar. Beautiful Broadmoor. Turllto: Rock.Decorator drapes. Xlnt loc., "'alldng dist. to elem. & high school. A l\.1UST SEE AT S48. 750 INCLUDING THE LAND. C"l.111li"l 1i·llil, ---,-1 \pn llur "SINCE 1946" 1st \\'estern Bank Bldg, University Park Doys 5S2·7000 Nights GLAMOUR PLUS can bl! found in this J bdrm .. 2 ba . townhouse with sepa.ra.te family room and wet bar. CentraJ AJft.(;,ON· DITIONING. e. I e c Ir 1 c 1arage door opener. hght~d landscapifli. mirrored din· ing room w11l1. fireplace tn master bedroom, \\'&lk·!n closet a..nd much more in· eluded ln the 2200 sq. ft. nl floor space. Wi,500. May we lho"-' il to you today? ired hill SPANISH 3 Bdrm.. 2~S baths. beam ctlhn&a & wood burnln& fl!'e pl&Cf', "-'et bu .l built·in ki tchen. A bso ! u ll! l y un· bl!:Lievable ocean & coastll \•ltw1 from evtry room. $68.9511. via tan REAL E.STATE 1190 Gienne)'Te St. I 494-~73 ~315 FAMILY DREAM I 2-Sty, 1tucco w/&hake rool. !I Bdrms., 2~ baths: living mr. "-'/frplc., formal dLnlna: rm., lie kilchen. w/brktt. area. Good nei&hborhood. A5king $44.500. ... 499·2800 * •~ ~ 50..ml ~ CA.II. -~-=---BEACH HOUSE $29,500 Quaint homto: area: close in. BPam c~·s.. fir. to cetJ . 1 trplc., pictu re "'indow, rel .. ~'aShtr. 1 Br wtbath. MISSION REAL TY .494--0731 SUPERB Opportunity-Ov.·ner transferred-\Vants action! 3 BR, 2 BA home on !l.1y~tlc HUI. A!king $43,~. Make , your otfl!r. Whit a k e r Realtor. 494-4434. Laguna Nigu•I BY OWNER -3 Br, 2 Ba , vito:w lot, Jonner model home. furn & a pp l e . available. $32,200. 495-4332, 8.lfh\976. lido hlo IACK IAY !-BDRM. CONDOMINIUMS Bu1ldera cl oseo ul, in beautiful Newport Riviera, 3 m1s1tr 1izl!! BR.a. Cl~ iq. ft.) 21; ba .. floor to ceUlna fireplace. v.•·w sha& carpet !hruout, custom drapes & diMiwa1her. HUIT)'! Ju5t 4 lei!. YOU O\VN TH E u~~D. sis,250 Y.P. 4 bdrm. moclt>ls from S28.600 10% dn. 61)% Int. Take Irvine to Santa Isabel Ave. Follow the 1igns to modPI or call Sales Office 540-5147. Ocean View From AU An9le1 Tln!d o! lookina: at neiahbor'a v.·alls7 CUt your eyes on the sparklin& blue Pacific from any window o! this custom Temple H I ! l Ii mAnSion. Wa tch !he sun set behind Cata.Jina Island. Buy a telescope, \\'ord1 can't deJ1cribe the beauty, this 3 ~droom has ii all. Fonna.1 dining room. lush carpet1 and matching drapes. We will trade anything you have for this $60.000 caaUe. You V.'l.IJ agree. Call tor ap. pointment. Realtors 545--0465 2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adams Open EVt's. PARK LIDO These "'"ell maint!ined home a.tt fee i1U1d, ha.vto: adjacent pool and common areas, and are conv e n i e ntl y located near everything. 2 and 3 bedroom mode.ls from $26.900. Ca.JI 67>-7225. DAILY "LOT JI} .__ ... _ .. _._'!._'_~1_'' _ __, ~ [ _,,,_ 125 lots !Gr Solo 170 FREE RENT FOR I YEAR On all Levin dl!play models. 1000 Vlllago Houso (Sl-1005.5), sklrtin.g, aU' con· di1ionln1. wood decks. Wu S.17.100. Now S14.500. 1200 Villogo Houso (S-100521. 3 WOOd decks, lkirtina. Wu tl8.900. Now $15,500. Contempo Communities 24002 Ridge Route Drive On Moull'ln Parkway, adjacent to Leisure \Vorld) Laa:una Hills 83(}. 7900 VIKING 12x60 wtth e.xpando. ~ntral air cond. o n beautiful lot In adult park. 15.302691. ?-.tany others. COAST 636-4760 NE\V modl!l. 20x51 Vitt@Oy 2 br, 2 ba, carpet throughout. Sa.650. Contempo Communities 24002 Ridge Route Dnve fOn Moulton Parkway, adjact>nt to Leisure World) Ll.guna Hills 830-700'.l 12x5.5 Mayflower doubll! e.x- pMdo. 2 Br., aJJ extras, adult park. 108 o~prey Ln., F.V. 968-1368 or 642-1186. ·n. 24.'C52, 2 BR, 2 BA, Indry rm, view lot, $75. mo. Adlts. \Vestm .. Sll.900. 839-1486. DUAL-\VJDE 20x55, 2 Br .. 2 ba. encl. porch. Immacu- late. $10,500. (FOOOl-21 COA5T 636-4760 Rul Estate, ....... .. Acr11g1 for sale I~ ISO JW lot. rood rental ania, E/alde. Of, $13.500. 182 Ctcll Pl., C.M. M~983. General Huntington S.•ch Gener•I Gen•r•I ~ • D&na Pt. Share 2 ~r hse •WE ha\'e • W'E• le.lectlon ruee \.1eY.'. Ail convenience' ot 3 and 4 bedroom homei HIDDEN VILLAGE APTS. Mountain, Oet1r1. Re1ort 174 St~ • "''k. Priv room, all Ulat can be 1'00\°ed into I almost immediately on our Hom•Llke Ll¥1ng F1mlll1s Welcome! ---------prlVl.l. rood .trl!a.. CcU1 ' • ' Rent -0 pt Ion p I an . 2 Lot" "eluded 12.450 NU.V IEW RENTALS SHERWOOD RE A LTY . 2 BEDROOM-2 BATH Moonrtdge cabin $15,750 673-4030 cir 494-3248 S4o.855S ~ Lakeside cabin $35.000 Corona del M•r ===----=---c-1 Fr om $159 . Carpets -Drapes · Air Conditioned -Enclos- ed patios . Heated Pool -Forced Air Hut - Carport & Storage. _ Call 866-4641 or write; ----------1N"E\V Hunnnaton Beach , Spe~r Real E&tate, P. O. $210 -2 Br, gar, apt, 1 blk 3,0C(I Ml · !I. 4 Br .. 3 ba., Box 2828, Bi& Bear Lake, ocean, Dt!<'.k, Ytly . , . bonus rm.. OlyrnpJC l?. Calif. '$250 -2 Br. 2 ba hst. Lovely pool. S 4 2 5. Zl3/4JO..S667 2500 South Soito, S1nt1 An• 546-152$ (enter 2 blks \V. of Bristol. off Warner on Linda Way, south to W. Central) BIG Beu Lake front home & 1uest houM! on pri. poLnt. Fawnsk111 Atta. 2 lots Incl. $56.(KXJ. P:bone 1714 ) 846-6371 for into &: llPP'- Out of Stoto Pr..,. 178 3 BR Home on lar&e lot, for sale in Grant'& Pau, Ore· ~n. 642-1834. Real Est•t• W•nted 184 pii tio, J::ar. 1 blk bch •• , eves. 5600 -2 Br hst>. 1\i b!k. "LA-RG:,_,,E_4_B_R-.. ~bl~tn-,-. -pa-t~io. ocean. Sip~ 6 A\'all July ... atrium, "·alk to beach. VILLA MARSEILLES NU-VIEW RENTALS Av"l. 6/JS. 128" 962-'6tl. SPACIOUS 1 & 2 BEDROOM APT. 673-4030 or 494·3248 Ocean Breezes _ 2 Br. S15S. Fur n ished & Unfur n i1hed Laguna Beach 3 BR , Sl!G. Fncd. &: Vacant. Adult Living Rent·A·House 979·8430 Dishwasher color coordinated appliances • $180 - 1 Br dplx w·trplc. co , ~ 1 Plush shag carpet . mirrored wardrobe doors.. Nicely furn au yd 3 BR NDO. 1 BA, poo 5' indirect lighting in kitchen • breakfast bar • v i · ' ' patio, dbl J::ar. frpl, nr S~w_: Charming cottage Ln ocean. 96Z-al86 aft 5 pm. huge private feoced patio • plush landscaf; ia.rden. Pvt pat, yd, vnJ 1 BR Condo. pool, clbhse. ing · brick Bar·be-Ques · large heated poo s WANTED R-2 property ad· pe1 OK , . . cpt/drp5, all appli ancr'>. &3·1 Olan! ai. Airl cont dSitionSin'Z. A 557 "200 · $235 -Lge 2 Br apt w·Bal-Sl.50/mo. 54~1405. 537-~4 So. Br sto t ., anta n1 ·o Jacent to b!ach. Newport COLDWELL, BANKER & CO. Be:ach to Corona de! t.lar. cony, xtnt vie."-'. \Valk 3 BR. garage · Children but MANAGING AGENT Hi!!ve $j()()() cash & S800(l bch . . . no pets. 377 E. 18th St.l'l!!!!!!li!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!i!i!i!ii"'~~!iiiijji!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!~I Coin Collertion a! dc,\~·n NU-VIEW RENTALS 642-1163 1$175.) /! payment. Aft 6 pm. 114: 673-4030 or 494-3248 Irvine 1 ~..;P_•_•_._F_u_r_•_. ____ 360_ Apt•. Furn. 360 684-43 75. 2 & 3 BR $150 perm,. General Coste Mesa QUALIFIED buyer desires e.stabhsd·salar1ed adults, no 3 BR., 2.ba., atri ... $3~/3351'iiii CAnyon Vu hm. Cd~f. Shore pet/child, ret. 494-8170. 3 BR .• 2oa .. tam. rm .•• $335 I• A WEEKLY·MONTHL Y CJiHs or Cameo Shores. Newport Beach \\'E 1-lAVE OTHERS SUNNY ACRES Prine Only. Write Classified Bold New Concept 2376 Newport Slvd Ad No. 387. Daily P;Jot. 1----------1 548·9ThS Low Ra.tes P.O. Box 1"0, Co•la Me" LRG 3 hr. 2 ha heme. Frpl<. FURNITURE RENTAL STUDIOS .l I BR'S. ROOMS Ca. 92626. . 1 crpt/drps. dbl gar, fncd yd, e Fre~ t.ineil'.i &: UnJ. Steps tD bch. $350 per ~·k or e Phone Serv-Htd Pool WANTED ap&rbnent houses. $1200 per mo. 494·7116, ... t.fonth to t.tonth • TV&: l\Iaid Serv Ava.tl Orange Co. JO to !ill units. . "'"7 ""~6. .~-:_~=~"-----~~~~I "SINCE J"6 "'" * 100% Purchase Option e Children &: .... , iection not more than 12 yrs, old. -....., .. ~ Quick action! Hardy 2Ll: Walk to Beach -1 BR. $130. lst \Vestern Baruc Blda. .. Wide Selecnon. HOLIDAY PLAZA 378-8511 vet. l.36, day or 1 BR mobile $130. $91'.l up University Park, Irvu1e Styl~or.. DELUXE SpPJciou1 l BR. rute. R~~f·A·House 979.1430 Days 552-7000 Night1 .. 24 H.our Delivery fum apt. Sl.35. Heated pool. NEWPORT Bch area 3 or 4 --= )J;l Amplto: pa.rkin1. Adu.lta: - br home or townhouse in ex-Houses Unfurn. 305 2 BR., 2 baths ......... $300 W ~~ ® ~~pto:ts. 1965 Pomona Ave., change !or OTC stock cle ... r 3 BR., 2~~ Oaths , • 1315/m ~ .._;. _ --·1 1· BAY VIEW l..argto: double lot, Via Lido N'ord 6 Ge.noa. Room for pool in huge patio. 2 BR. -;r--tCfLv. -den. din. rm. 3 car garage. $99.500. COLWELL GOV'T Land • S5 ac. \\IMte , La.nd Grant, Box ~l Sa.n r Bernardino, Ca. { s e n d or lo''' loan prop. prefd. 3 BR , 2 baths .••. $325/365 * $25 PER WEEK * G44-6n9 Gener•I ._ u ---------3 BR., 2 ba., tam., den •• $400 517 W. 19th, CM 548.3481 .,. P -Pool ti: mald &erv -1~;.~~~~~·d~'~:. ~h~~.~·E:~~:o; ~red hill 'r'" ~ ·;~~ ;EA;'!-0314 ~:!~ffi~~~ai PROPERTIES, INC. REALTORS ( HARBOR View Home.,.., ~ bor:oaR& laW90D Jri. bdrms, lrr !am room & den. lleOltom Unu~ual DECO RA TO a IN· 34.16 Via Lido 675-4562 TERIOR plus all BUILDER 3 BR + fa.m. & din rms. 45' EXTRAS. Charmin& use:! Lot, 1trto:et to 1treet $69,500 brick patio & fire rina 7S Ft. lot, lg:e. home. Street I w/qua.int garden brea.kfast to street ...... , ... , . $90,000 l nook. $72.500. By Owner. LI 00 REAL TY For appt. phone 644-6?46. 33n Via. Lido, N.B. 673-7300 BAYFRONT, PIER Charming 5 BR be.ach home Build your own · on undy •hen. Exdtizta CLOSE TO BEA.at Get ha.rbor action • choice the horn!! you wAnt on I local!!. . Lido 151.e. 116 Via Me.ntrJne 2301 Bay51de Dr. $168,000 BARRETT REALTY 642-!1200 By Appointment Tl!d Hubert 6~ EXCITING 5 Br. 4 Ba. Fam * BY QWNER * & dn rm. 2 stry fl'T!lc. Look ove r! our competition. S!'l3.97i0. 126 Via. Lorca-\\11! have Ir: ha w priced th.la 645-4695. home for a la.st &ale! Cust. LOVELY LIDO HOME bit 4 BR. all xtru. Nr. schls. $42.000. Open Sat &: Ideal for lUie or miall tam· ily. 4 BR, fam rm, 3 BA. big sunny patio. $85,900 KEN BRITTINGHAM REAL TOR 67S-0123 O\\'NER-Custom 3 BR. 3 BA. 2 frplc. form din. 11 4 Via Mentone. $71,500, 675-S948 Sun 12-5. 2212 Margaret Dr. 646-0143 or {114) 'i.>J..-0393 coll. Opan Sot. 1 :30.S:30 444 Sovlllo Avo. BaIOOa Penln. point. 2 BR & !am. rm. It sparkles! -GEM1-- 1610 W. Cea.st Hv.'Y., N.B. REAL TORS 642-4623 8G ACRES. New Mexico, nr. I ~~~~~~~~~~ awroximately $200 p er • REALTY LARGE 1 BR. Clean. Sunny. national !om;t $61.25 P ER I 1 [iJ mooth. Sto p by a nd 1 BR .F"urn. & Unfum·. Carport, Nr ah o p,. ACRE S,9 M -· -•1 I Univ. Park Centu, Irvuie stamp) · o. '100""\IV'I • f'Nncial • browM!' ~ 1t.1 ¥ou might FROM ONL y $175 S140tmo. + dep. 998 El 2~ ACRES Ante1ope Valley, J'';;;;;;;~~~ hnd what you're looking !or.foM!!!!!!!!!!V!!!!rd!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~• OCEAN QUEEN Camino. Apt. 1. C , M . only S250. down. Owner Ila • e 1830 E. Ocean Blvtf. 546.-04;;1. must sell. ~3086. Buiinesi 3 BR. 2 Ba • fuU crpt & Long Beach (213) .\15-5345 Furn. B•chelor & 1 Br's Commerclal I Opportunity 200 Realtors d r a Pe s · $300. Near l\.tng'd by William \\'alters Co espticially nice. 2110 ProPtrtv 158 2791'.l Harbor Blvd. at Adams e\'erythui,. M0-6n7 Lovel;y B Ibo.I 1 1 nd Newport Blvd •• CM. CANDY SUPPLY ROUTE Co!ota Mesa, Calif. home. 64.>-2922 da.ys. 8 1 8 --0-p--0--U-N-lfY--<NO SELLING INVOLVED) N t B ach * BACHELOR APT. .. LARGE I BR Apt., nicety P RT PART OR FULL TIME LANDLORDS! ewpor • y..,1,, $ll5, Incl. uni. hJrn., pool $138 mo. lMT N " bl BLUFFS PLAZA :O.lonrovia Av~. No . l . This tine comm er c i a I ow ava11a e in Orange We Specialize in Newport \Vinton Real E!otAte 67~3331 S4&-54 lO. building has an upstairs County and 1urmUndini Bea.ch e Corona. del Mar e Choice. 1-sty. e.nd unit. 3 BR . B lb p 1 1 , --~-'.,..-.,...,.. __ _ apartment that thf'! owner arras. Ygu ~ay ketp your &: Laguna.. our Rental Ser-2 ba Re.decorated? Avail. a oa en nsu • * NO DEPOSITS * can Jive in. A small duplex present 'f>osit1on. All loca· 1 vice. is FREE to You! Try June 5th at S350 per month. e $25 \VK & UP-On Ocean. e Lrr M"-·ly decor 1 &. 2 Br. 2 is also included for only tions are commto:rcial or Nu-View! ~ Lovely Bach· 1 Br .• Rooms Ba , pool. Ii: tee a.re.a . S79,900. Call ~7225. facto_ry furnished by _us. NU-VIEW RENTALS !{~<t.... ~laid service-Pool·Util Pd. 64.>-5530. 710 w. l!th St. Qualified . P:tr!oOn w 1 l l 673-4030 or 494-3248 [fl -~~ • Call 675-8740 • ATTRAC. oompl. furn. 2 Br .. COLWELL PROPERTIES. INC REALTORS First Time Offered Coast Hwy, Corona del Mar 3 Comml!rdal & duplex $95.ooo o we TD@71!% E. 17th St., Costa Mos1 Top location, IDw down 11.S"' Spendable mum Re&lonomics, Bia. 675-6700 Duploxos/Unlts sale 162 ·=mye ~~:~~~~r ~:~~ VACANT AND CLEA.'J . 3 'St t.·.~ U BRAN D New Beaut l Br lti) ha. htd. pool, nr. 1Chl1. • Du I -• ..,. t to shop, le (rwys, no -ts. J oy. Baby Rut h . But. BR home with fenced ya.rd, ly p ex, ... .,.c, pa. . I l!p& ,,.. tertinger, Nestles, Planter!, flr@'place. builtins. n ~a r ~ rea ocea.n. Yrly only S400. mo .• 64=5-4..:::22>:::.. ,-,=-,---- Tootsie Rolls. Pa,y Da.y, South Coast Plaza.. S27i0 per 2414 Vist! del Oro c!l62-S6:;:.;:::tl:;..=-...,c----,.,.-.. l1l5 .. Milk Duds. Reesto:s Pea.nut month. Agent. 546-4141. Nl!wport Beach YEARLY 2 Br. SIDW, ~trig. Studio Apta .. 1 Br. ~ Butter Cup • advl!rt.isl!d na-$190 Month. 2 Bedi'oom. 644-UJ3 ANYTIME ea.rage, Beautilul c on d . Older adultl. No petJ tionally 011 T.V. etc.). \Ve N!!wly decorated inside and •125 V ,,. 3 Br Penln Adults, no pets. S 200 . 1135 Elden, Mii'· Apt. 6. are a national company. out. No Fee. 842-6691 or "-;, ft d ery& <a~ 673-6244, 673-8224, S135/dlx mobile home, w/w Very high incomto: potential. 962-5566. $3~ _e le~ lo~1c: ·t~~ din Corona del Mar cpt, ad1tl. no pet s . You must have 2-8 hrs. per Corona del Mar PONDEROSA Mob. Est. \\.-eek 1pare time (day1 or ~· frp[c, 2 decks, boat 2 BDRMS .. 3 baths ; frp\c. 1001 Npt ·Blvd. 646-3373. eves.) a1lp • • • Fanta.stic ~an vie"-'! OLX 2 $1.720 REQUffiED BRAND NEW-$495 S365 -Npt Shorta:, 3 Br, 2 $425 Month. No pets close toB:: :~ta~~ For more tnformaUon wnte: 4 Br, 3 Ba. Fam rm. 2 trplcs. ba, bltina, nu ah q , frplc · • · William \Vinton Realtor ""'ts. .._m "~. 18 4 1 "ROlITE DEPARTMENT Carpets. drapes. Next to S400 -J Br, 2 ha, frpJc, hu.a:e 229 1'-la.rine Av~. ,... 'rv - No. 23", P.O. Box 1739 pool & clu~. Harbor patio, boat slip... Balboa I5land 67~3331 Pomona, CM. Covina. Calif. 91722. View Homes. 673-7lll. NU·VIEW RENTALS OfARMING 2 B t VERY nlcel BRdp!x. QuJet. Include Phone No. . 673-4030 or 494-3248 r-. ap 5• Sep. by p.ra.ges. Adultl 2--l pll":Xes, c.~l. Sl08,000 4 BR, 2 BA , fArn rm, din rm, . . drps. ranee &. re tr i i. over 30 no pets 54g..1021. terms. Grogg Sl4,340 yr. CONVALESCENT &: BHA Harbor View Montego. Ex· S1J1gle1 or iamilles. 2 BR. Located on oce&l\$ide of ' · 1\.-tESA VERDE VALUE: * JUST LISTED * B-1-2.J br. Tobin Rlty 15 • 26 e 44 • 99 Bed. tra n ice $4.50. 833-3894. Frplc. $179. Kids & pets. Hwy. Hid. swim pool &: car 2 BR a pt Util. Pd. Spacious new 4-bedroom, 3-Mfrl.171. We spttializ.e all a.re.as. Sin&le• or families-walk to Rent-A·House 979-8430 port. Lease. 642--8400. $110 mo. 2277 Maple bath executive 2· s tor y BEACH INCOME BY Owner: c:apo Beach, Abode Business Broker1. bch. 4 BR. Has everything. 3 BR. 1% Ba . Steps to Bay&: LARGE 1 BR -un/urn. Street. fill 5'8-.591.! home. Filled with extr4s. Xln! location. $47,500 $50,0ll or trade for tot. Cal.I n 4: 645-7555: 2ll : 937-1774· R1nt·A-Hou1e 979.8430 Ocean. beaches. Garqe. Water paid. n9,,, Ma.ritold. Huntington Beach ~~r:i~e .liv~:m:m d1~ngth George Williamson 53&-0346. + LIQUO R License. Or11.11ge. HARBOR Vie-.v/Ca.rmel. 3 6A~u~t~l:7 no peta:. SJ(X) yrly. $180. Vac. Jun~l • 494-3661 room. Breakfast n 0 0 k. Reil tor ·1cn::c:.o.:m:.:o=:..,P~r-o ___ rty,---""1"'"'66 Co. ott sale. "Clun... br, 2 ba. tam rm. din rm. ,}-0'! • S210 -2 Br. aa.r. a pt, 1 btk S•• 'S70 64S-IS64 ·-----'~---'---~7-4SlO or 499-3992· Extra. sha.rp. $450 mo. 2 BR/den, 2 ha. N!!wport ocean, Deck. Yrly .•• Country kitchen "-ilh larg~ - f11.mily room. F. 0 u rt h IMMAC. 2 BR .. 2 BA Condo CAROLYN COOKE & Assoc. Money to L<Nin 240 644-1/a9 eves. or wkends. Shorto:s. yrly ]sf! at S250 mo. $250 _ 2 Br. 2 ba hie. Lovely h NORTH ESTATES -See the ----------I IRVINE Terra•e graciou•y Avail June 1st 548--0066 patio, ear. 1 blk bch .. , h<!!lroo. m & t ird bath at charm'"• Ca-Ser•·••· '-k ~ thi Id '· ,. ' d II I I "' .. ~ ..,. e uum 1 0 141 ion Real Estate Loans dl!corated. Family home . .4 Singles or Families 4 BR, 2 $600 - 2 Br hse. 11,l blk t "· .Y ocattd or USI! ll.s I c~t•. d~•. 1~1 ·.. pool. ,. h alk to ., . · ... '.. • .. " ca in, t l!n w 1 · $1 ,000 TO $1S,OOO NOW! BR. 2',' ba. 2 4-.Jc. patio-1ty, vu, &-n}it Jevl!I. ocean. Sips 6. Avail July ... maid s qu.art. ers 'OT IUl'!!ot S29,!il0. By owner. 114·. v-• bl It Sl4 N\J:'. 3 .. ., ~ .. room. Utility room v.·ith 97~1478. flJua e 0 • ,.,.,.,, HOMEOWNERS: CompuP. Lrg yrd. S600mo. Owner. Rent·A·Hou1e 979-1430 NU.VIEW RENTALS ,,·asher dryPr hookup .. --:-::.,--:-------FA\l/NSKJN -Lakefront J Br OUR COSTS! \Ve are NOT 67~3032. LSE. Spac. 2400 sq. ft . 4 Br. 673-4030 or 494-3248 S kl bl k ·'I t HARBOR V•"ew Home. 5"··1 only S28·500 ~·1 rt B ke-• 0 prin ers. oc Wcu en-01 "0 gage ro '"· ur 1 BLK from beach, 2 BR, lg lot. S42S NB Back Bay LARGE Bach .. l bUu bia: ""'· luxurious carpeting & Somf'rset. Xtra.~. fee l11.11d . . . LOAN GUARANTEE as-I I In d d S2'"/ A I 6126 "2-~•1 Co I d It no .... t1 644--4917. 1853 Port fl.far,ate. I Wt:' specta.lu:~ in all types 01 rure1 you o! lower rates! p ·· c ya.r 'ti.I mo. v · ' ""' """ · rona. a u • ,..... · drapes, d ish"-'asher, $38 . .:00. Big Bear property & Ask for Pat or J im N t H • ht Sl25 I: $15.5. Ye a r I y. Call 546-3335. Newport Heights bUSJ.ness. Our variety of repayment S40-8.l.1.5. ewpor e1g t 642--85:20. POPULAR Republic 4 BR .. 2 story • formal dining. large family I: 3 baths. Owner's family raised and gone, ""ill trade for smaller 3 bl!:droom home in th!! f\1esa. Verdi! area. Call Mr. Black. 5458424 I Open e v e 1 . ) SOUTH COAST REAL TORS BY ownf!r. Prime Corner SUper pool! 2 Sty.-4 Br. trplc. fam. rm. crpti;, drpa. Many extras 9n.2120. 5 BR Tri·level, pool &ize ror- nrr Jot. $58,500. principal& only. Owner. 546--0IJ)7, Minion Vlojo ' '1E,,10RIAL DAY REN. TALS pl&ns pennita us to Pll!ase ~-==--~ .. -.-1~1~0~5 --""".,.-"'""°"""'"--" you personally. Costa Mesa e FOR Lease, 2 story, 4 br, SELECT Bache..,., BY OWNER Seautifu.l nu lists/maps w/util. Businessman non-NO PREPA Y?-.tEl'il 1102.~ . I Br cottage, g••, 214 ba, bltn1. drpa .l cpt1. J BR. Spanish channer. RI!-Youn for ilil! asking? PENALTY "" ... / 213 _,,.. smoker w/privacy, Quiel mode I e d. redecorated. Box 275 Big Sear La.kl! yrd patio, sml pet ok • • . Avail 6 l. Sl'!S. 'i;i;,-613.1 675-4859. 3484 ~2544 Fireside Thrift Co. 513;;. Util pd . Lrg Bach, lull I="~;;;:'---:;,--,.,-,,,,,. Beaut. loc. $36,000. 645-6193 TI4-866-I 2328 Harbor BJ. C. Mesa kitch, t or 2 .-.pte . • • S•nt• Anl Heights 2 BR-View, nr. Biz Corona. days, 673-1658 !ves. See any. -=~~~_,,.--,--645-lOOO .. --S220/mo. Util pcl. Yearly. time. 28 Unit·Nr Shop'g. 819 N. Main. Santa Ana. 5145 . 2 B.r hs:. neat & clean. HORSE PROPERTY Adults, no pets. 64Z-85Jl. 23 &ar, yrd, patio ... J BR. Vacant. R-2 room lo 2 A: 3 BR, 2 Ba. 8 1 Ella 547-0684 NU·VIEW RENTALS 3 B~ .. 2 BA housl! on%. ac. Cotta Mesa build. S29,900. A.Kent. Ave. HB. $420 M. 147·3957. NEED CASH ? Sl.OOO, Or up 673 4030 or 494 3248 Built·tn~. cpts, drps, &ar, --------- 6'ia-Ol« 646-7414 BRAND new de:tuxe trlpll!x, to $3,1'.m. Sl0.000 and more. · · fncd yrd, patlo, 2 box stalls. WEE KL Y-MONTHL Y 2293 Fordham Dr., C.M. See Avco ThMfl fnr a Re&! Palisades 2 BR. $l30, Fncd. ·Horses, kids/pets welaime. Executive SultlJ Bldr/owner. 543-6148 eves. Estate Loan. Upon ap-bring kirls! Cool Brttlt.I. $300. 2010 Newport Blvd. Prova.1, use the money Rent-A-House 979.1430 NU-VIEW RENTALS Costa Mei• INVESf \Visely, beaut. ~~iij!i~iijiii~iii~ I ho"·ever you like. Al~ ask Thrto:I! ~droom , 2 ha.th 673-4030 or 494-3248 642·2611 deluxP, brand new, by Mobil. Hom.. builder. IS) 4-plexes $65.COO about ou r unse cu rto:d charmer with large2fenctd Houaesfurrt.ar STUDIOS & 1 BR'S persoM.J loens. A V C 0 yard a.nd 1arage:. S 10 pto:r e FREE L!nen11 For Sale 125 eacli. {2) TrTple.xl!s. -COOO THRITT. 620 NI! .. _. Ctr. month. Unfurn. 310 e FREE Utilitil!s locauons ln Costa. l\.ito:M. "'I''"· ............. 1972 SHOW STOPPER Et.DORADO 2 BR, lt,ii BA. Fantastic &ya.l Monarch. lux. cpts. cust. drps, Pvt. Stt it to btlito:ve IL 2-bM. well-lndscpd. tow mnln<'t, Patio kitchtn, den Ii: v.-et C'OVT'd patio &: garden wall<. bar. H unt i na:ton B c h .• Dr .• Suite 101, Ne"'JlOrt e Full Kitchen Westminster 534-215.1. Be:ach, Ph. 833-J44o Balboa Peninsula • Heated Poot Realtors 646-7711 • La.undry Facilidts lndustrlol Proparty 161 1st TD Loans 2043 we .. clill °''"' BAYFRONT. Chcie<!.5 BR.'. TV ~ maid""' 1va!I laQUINTA HERMOSA Spanieh Country E1tate Liv- ing le SpacioUJ Apll. Tl!r- ra.c.ed pool; 1unken ga1 BBQ. Unbelievable Livinj: - Only 1 BR • FURN. $17S ALL UTILITIES PAID C4 blla S. of San Diero Trwy on Beach. l blk \V, on Holt to 16211 Parkside Lane.) rn<1 1 847-5441 1145 -1165 Bachelor &: 1 BR, patio&, frplc'1, priv. & a r a 1 e s. Divi~ bath &: Iota of closeu. Rec hall, pool le pool tables. uuna. bathl. See for yoorM!'lf! 17301 Keel1an Ln. fl blk w. ot Beach, 1 blk N. of Slater). 842-7848 UPPER front 2 B r • Overloolong lake park I: beaut. enclosed patio &: pool. Adult&, no Jll!!ll. $169. US 12th SI. 536-3692. t BR. Condo-Pool. 2 cu car., nr heh.. yr/summe.r. 3151 Pawtucket. r.2131 f4>«16S. Newport S...ch pavl!d sldeyard for boat or Contempo Commw}1til!11 camper. $19,500. Assumable ' 2-lOOl Ridge Route Drive REACL TY1 1....... 64'. % k>an. Owntr. 837-1185.1 (On !l.toulton Parkway, Univ Park en er , • ~ ... ~ I dj I I '-· \ · ' 83J-.(l33) 4 BR 2 BA fam rm lndry I a. acen ° uclSUn ~orld) 32 UNITS I Open 'til 9 P~l BA, plu &: noat, SummPr • Phone Service Over 2 acrta of euy lJvtna:, 63A % INTER EST IM~tAC . 2 BR .. crpt~ .. drps .. or yearly. Furn. or unfurn. NYCE 2 Br 'n'atll!r •. S140. encl . gar., adults. $150. per o~ntr. 6il--3>J9. Adults. no pets. 645--4.330 1.'!2 ~:' ~;~~~-:.2nd TD Loans 1 mo._ 26~8 Eldtn Ave. Townhous1Unfurn. 335 w.WUM>n.C.M. 2 BR upper-2 houus to beach. Drape1, tha.i crpts, $2,'X) yeuly l!!a!oe. 642~3443. e WINTER RENTALS e West Newport Restrve now! ABBEY REALTY ~ Call Anytime · · · Laguna. Hilla 830-7900 nn , vtew, shAg cpt, $38,900. 4 BR. 3 BA Turtle.rock. Buy I Pnrt. only. 8.17-38.36. 2x$l Whittier. l Br., 2 b& & thru Bkr. $48.fSO: thnl O"--nt New rt Be•ch tam. nn. Sklrtln& k '"'n+ $47 400 Tabor Drive. Se!' po tnp. Sl!t up in New Lquna . ~· · Hills adult puk. Wq 111 · POOL $Ll,200. Now Sil.~. L1guno llooc~ HIGHLAND DR. Conlempo C.mmunin., BEACHFRONT Ideal hnme En prlmt H.ubcrr i ~ ~~:0~:~rtve Fabulou~ viev.'. beAut. beach. Hla'ttl1.nd1 ll'f.I. 4 SpiclOUI adjacent to Leilure w:id) 2 BR 2 BA. ror1eous O\Vn• BR.. fa.m. rm.. ,~ ba. your-<>wn 1pt1. Sf:cur\!y , Kitchl!'n bltin1, cpt/drpa, It Lag-una HWi 830-7900 elevator. pool, car. $43.C()O a 'lWklinl htd. pool . PRIVATE party oldu modtl ro SSl,000. Qv.•ner v.i ll \eaH-$44,CXXl. hou1e t r a 11 e r , 30)3' p urch ase o pt i on . CALL 4 ,,,.1,1, wl30x12' ctbana. Ready to ,14 :499 -3005 Bkr .. ~'?!~ Uve in. CholOll Newport 213o&G-52l5. ~ locallon. $1400. or but olfer [l's aJWl.)'S tJ-e rtiht time 6' I' • t.. TY 2912 W. Cat. Hwy .. H.B. al'Nl,YI the n,tlt p1a.ce U ~~t : Po1t Ortic• Sp&et: No. 4.. '46-1220, )<"I v.•ant RESULTS? C&ll Rive w i.lt 1 .. ~ you want to EXCEPTTONALLY Nice l U f,U...5671 I pllct that ad sdJ? C1slitied eda do II SX40. Sl.6'>-T'trm IOdaiy! v.-ell -call NOW ~-Call ~~,, ---- Schedule shows ~o/o return 67J.-.:iZ70. _ 1 BR Trailer. S100 + uttl . No on 15,.,.1 dawn. M•v ex· Lo11.•eit ralell Or11.ngt Co. 2 BR w/,ar. 1140. fncd yrd logun• H ills p!!ls. Qult t. cozy bachelor " ~ "WE BUY TD'S" •ut~ chaJiit . l.Jated p r Ic e : o,1•/pat10. Wtr pd. 2228 pa'1. '79"1"' <NJ· $445,000, calJ our lnvl!stmenl S1ttltr Mtg. Co. Placentia Ave IB). Call btWl'J BRAND Ne.w • 3 BR, 2 BA, Dlvt~n. 546-1600. 642-2171 54'-0611 1 & !I, 636-4120, ~;~~o~;::· ~~11.pool. TIME FOR 10 THE REAL "-ESTATERS WATERFRONT R.-1 Fee lot in Newport SOOres, Only P'),00). Bill GRUNDY RHltor 675-4161 341 Ba)'Jld<. Npt. Beach .. M·I (l)RNER + With oldtt houte. Prime location, Coll> Meaa Corbln·Mll't!n Realtors &.f4.. i&62 or 60-39€9 Servirtl Harbor area 21 yn. 2 BR. dtil garagt. d!.lldrtn :--,---,~:---= OK. St85 mo. '""· can Duploxos Untum. 350 QUICK CASH MONEY avail for 1st & 2nrl )OMI also purchsse TDa. Marvin ~tcClure RtAI Estate, .JJltS $. Hlll St., Oceansidt, d8.)'s 722$22, eves . 492-0424. Agtnt S42-l7Tl. Carona dtl Mar 3 BR.--28A..erpU, drape1, trgt---------1 yrd. Stove avail. W Si~. BRAND NEW-Avail. ln G H A Nto:ar 1Chool1. $225. 5.57-737!. June. Huge dlx O\\'nt!'r's TH RQU U unit l BR, l BA. F\rfplace, LOVELY 3 BR Homt'. fam Y bit-ins. lSOO ~ fl . + 3 DAILY PILOT \\'e Buy 2nd Tru1t Dted1 rm., sewing nn .. pool nn. decks w/mw of bay, The !Nin Co. S273/mo. 837·9517. &: hill Walk b h Rta.ltt:ln &t+.rul I oce1.n, •· to c DAILY PILOT & ahopplzta. I yr 1 ... $425. 610 Newport Qnttr Dr. Rtti. required, 67J.0960. Sulle 4lS Sil~ B<ar.b I CLASSIFIED ADS Newport Booch Pnval< mo,;.y tor "'al FOR ACTION. , , 3 BR .. I BA. "1olc.. !Op t11>te I01 n. ~Ir Ad1m1. CALL 642 5678 ahape! I blkl ocun. Yrly. Bkr-49!1-1130 • IJOO. Adlia "' peu. I~ WANT AD 642-5678 -------- Santi Ana DE ANZA PLAZA l I: 2 BR -Furn. • Untum. Pool1. carport.I & othu tx- tra1. Nr. S.A, 6 Npt ~ FTom Sill up. Adult1 only. no pet&. 1402 F'ruit St .• S.A. • M,\.6621') ... A.pl. Unfurn. Cor ona dtl Mar SHARP & cll!an 4 8ed.rcom, 21; bath walk tn beach. Family -pttfemd. Month to month. S390 pr ?Mil" C...U ~tr. Ballif')', 57~. Need a ''Pad''? P1lcl ID edl c.u "°"1671 ' 31) DAILY PILOT P.1ond..,,, tA•1 22. 1 ,~..'.:'.'.'..'.::::."--~ .;;~;.'..; ............... ~l~~1 I...,_."' ... I~ :;;I _._ ...... __ ~!~~ ~ler ___ -iiiiiii,,iiii I'~ --7:--I~ l~-;;;""';;·-;;·~ll5l~J ;!;;;;r ..... ;;·-;;·~J[ll]~+I ~I ~,,,i: .... ::. ..... ~J[Il]~I+ Apt. IJnfvm, US Apt. Unfum. U5 Aplt., Office Rental 440 ~~;.;.:;.::_ ___ .:;.;.;J Cement, ConcreteHO. ·;;;•;;-=;;.;;1.:.aa;;;n.:.1;:;"9::.... ___ Halp W a nted, M & F 710 Help Wentod, M & F 7IO I:.:;:;;_;_".""'."":':"---~um. or Unfurn. S70 DISCOVFJ't DJOCOVERY ~ Coron• clel Mar Costa Mesa DP.SK •i>ace avallabl:e $50 Find YOURSEU ' 111 Someone CE~1Elli'T \\!ORK, no job too Ut DUTCJI clran your BOYS Costa Mesa mo. WW provid• tumltuR Ca.II now • No ob.lljt11.Uon small, reuonable. FJ'ff carpea. Also. \\'Ind<>"'~ &: Acer.JG. CU:RK: Like 10 Age lO-I• to deln.>er papers at $5 mo. Answe:r4q R?"f1c. (114) ~ f213J 387-3393 £~11m. II. Slufiick, 548-8615. floorl. Xlnl \\'Ork. 5.17-1:.0S. 11iork 111 here .\'OU can tee I the in the Dana Potnl, San 0e- $ummer Rentals avaUab!a. 17875 Stach Blvd. NATJONALLY JOJfS'S Palm Ii. Block Landacaplng ocean brteze & strol~ along mente areas. 1------•I* * s110 * * 3 Br, 1~ Ba, newly painted -~ .. ,_a;..,_._ ON TEN ACl!ES Bllln•. crpl/drps, ~ncl palln. Nr achl' & 11hop'f. Ch1ldrPn ok, no pe.11. AAO Ct"nl,.r SI .. CM. 64Z.8340 or 548·26.'!2. · PALM MESA APTS. Huntlnfton Beach. 642-4321 RECbGNIZED work. An es.soc. or Van'' !hr Mach at noon . This DAILY PILOT MINUTES TO NPT. 801. BAY VIEW OFFICES PROBLJ-:t.t Pregnancy. Con· Landsc:t1pi~ C.~f. 646-8149. TOP SOIL -540..0097 ~;;:any llt'eds )OU. To 492-44:?0 FUR.Ni OR UNFUftN. Deh.1:iH>, aur·t:."Orxlltlr1ned fident, ~mpalhetic prt'gan-F'UN SPECIAL . F lrepit + 2 fill Dir!, C.1'11.de. RotolLU Unbelievably IArS:e 11f1t1., ftMeeoralPd. Lido arta, cy l'ouuling. Abortkin & modern benches. SIR9. c(lm· Call Nancy :'lhiy, ~0.6()5S CAREER opporlun1ty. \Viii train ror light machine operation -blu('print ing . Goorl dr1v1ng r I' co r rl nl'('('S~11ry, Cd.\! 11re11.. Call 1!14-il3J for 1nll'r\'if"W. 1 6 2 BJt. l'Un:I. I Unfl.n. nreplacet I prtv. paUOI. Pools Te:nnll Contnt'l· Didst. 900 Sf:& Lent, CdM 6f4.26ll !MacArthur nr c.out Hwy) 2 BR. Meu V er rlf' Tnwnh!)u11f'!. Crpt1., draf)f'~. t'ncl. i.!l rll.it" heated pool. SJ~. 96J-t022. h"•' -1. Ja~·-I oloot bJJ. Rralonomtrli, Bkr. 675-6700 A 1 1 1 APC E 1 p 0687 Masonry Coastal Agf'l'ley I ,...,.... .......... r opl on nr , AR . p rtr, atJOs xtra. 644-. 2700 I !arbor Bl. ar Arlarns n.!t, •ha.a: crpl1, drp•. NWla APT. auitsh!e for olf1rt> 642--4136. Child Cert ~le. Ad ult.I, no J)("ll. Phone Aervlcf', pool 2376 VAC TO ho BRICK, BLOCK & AD:'ll!N. 'TRAI~EE: F1gun" SJ"'GLE~ • A I N uncl? Respn. ti t U i~ • • • •••• 1' rom $135 I N,.1\·fJ'1rt Blvd. C, M, retlrNI rouple "''ill maintain YOUNG SET School. 111.:rs 2-6, STONI~ \\'ORK. 540-0929 your "'af to ie op. Sf> S:'VIL. l BR, Sl()S. Adull, no 1 DEDRM .•••.. From Sl40 ~.1'1t-9i5:'i. 1 i~ p I I & your loan background & E 2 BEDRM ,~ ~==~~-~--your iornf', 1,,.t.!t, r.1-9494. Open 7 Days. 6A:'l1-7:30 P'.\1. ant ng SIO OOtl 1---------ch!lrlrtn, no pet1. 336 . , • •. •• 1um Sl 60 i5FTICES SY.J &. $69 \\1ill Poperhango"ng "cb•111•1 1Y1 1 1° su1<1>i'I'\'ISf'~,,. ;=::. · CAREERS: ~ot jobs, but HARBOR GREENS Furnlah.d & Unfurnlahed F r om $120 to $215 mo l•chtlor1 • 1 Bdrm• 2 8drm1 • 3 Bdrm• 11/J or 2 Full Beth• 1'1uttr itlze bi-droom& w/ hlah bea.m celllni;:1, larg~ living room w/gas or wood hurnlnl( flrt'place. convenll'nt Jnundry art'B off kitchen. EnCll'lSed f>11.· t ins. 2 ~wlmmlnl( ptY!ls, lllH\I , rf'rrf'fl.llnn f11.clll· tle1. Security gutird. Modal& Open 'tll 9 pm. 2700 Peterson W •Y, CM nr H•rbor Blvd I Ad•m• 546-5025 A WINNING COMBINATION Yo.ur 1tp11rtment rn I T'tf'nch Country &•rdl'n -yt't nt'er ahnPJ'IMR: •nt1 9·ctivltie11. 150l'I Ml· n. ol llvtnr -yet '11.~y to malntfl.\n. Impe cca bly mnnsged -)'flt per10nlll l\llli private. J n" I rte : 2·3 bedroom•. 2 b"lh1. Outside: Jll'OI. putting , n11.turt. From $\9'\. THE VENDOME tS4!> Anrthelm Avenue Call Mr11. Phllllptt 642-21114 DELUXE APARTMENTS Alr C.Ond • Frp\c'• • 3 Sw1m· mtns Pool• • Health Spa - Tennl• Crt1 • Ci11.mt I BIJllard Room. I BEDROOM FROP.1 $165 MEDITERRANEAN VILLAGE 2'00 J.111.rbor B\vtl .• C.M. <n4l ~1'-8020 RENT AL OFFICE OPEN 10 A~1 ro 6 PM Naw Vlllil Podro F11.m\lte11 Welcome 2 Br .• 2 full Ba. •haa erp1/ drpA. p1Uo, befl.m ceU, 1ar· .... F'rtlm StSS. 2332 Eldl'n Av,., C.1'f. MS.@224 1"1ov11 1n allnwfl.nC'f', thl1 11.d. New Ville Cordov• Suptr [)f>\uxe Arl11ll J.Jvlnr .•• 2 BR. Apt.. ?l.,n. to Mo. SJ70 GRll &: \Vlr pair! 2323 Elrlrn Av,,, C.~f. &16·00.U P•rk·Llke Surrounding QUIET • DELUXE l, 2 A: 3 BR APTS Prv. palh'lJ • 1Ud F'Mlt Nr •hor·s:: • Adnll ~ Only Martinique Apts. lrn ~n111. An11. Ave .. C.l\I. . r. Apt 113 646-S5'12 llteStiBllU ZO gp.rkhn£ l'lf'""' ad11ll AP''· 20th SI. 64S.-1~17. You rn right, they're under-' . ' Separate program 6-lO yrs. a · f' rn a\·es .,,ll""VU""' .:::.:::.:::::..=-="'----prJcrd! l!ifil 1t1eu Or. dccorat~: Near 17th St., bank J[g) Prol. teachl'rs. sro 64&-3706. •-h . Coas!a! Ag~ncy long ter1n career spots. in 2 BR, rle11on-M pe1,,..1eion11ger (5 blka trom Newport Blvd.) & 5h('>pp1ng. 548-81J8. Lott ltld foi.ndc ._o_n_tr_•_c1_o_r ______ 1 20~ d15C. paper "" ani?ini;:, Z790 llaroor BJ at Adams managen1en!, engineering, nk. $145, m \\.', \VL1wn. 54G-9860 Business Rentel 44.S ~;;;;;;;;;;;;~·:;;:; ~ mobile store, vlnyl. flock. sal{'s & at'rounting for w MS-4407. I---------541-5M6 The Hangman AD~ll:\'ISTRATOR -llome rofe<:i::1onal. G reat o~ e SPACIOUS e ROO:'VI Addilions, Estimaies, O · o ,. * LRG Otluxe 2 BR. 2 RA. NE\V l!!ore S""ce now lea .. Found lfrH ads) 1 1 846-21112. \\·ncrs Associallon, rangr por1un 1!1Ps. frorn SHJ.000. \l/•ll·Dtlll~nM Apt•. 1~ 550 p ans & ayoul, single or 2 C 1 R bl I a:ar. aml pet nk. Nr. So. Jn.:. 2 locations in the heart 1 LT ~ t u· PAI:'>l'TING • Honf.'sl . c!ran, oun Y· esponst e or CaU Don Jack110n, ~10-6005 1 &: 2 BR. w/Terrace1. 'ory. · · \;Uns rue on. · · •· d 1 Co11.~I Plaz.a. 54~2321. of Orange County. 13'.>0 to r·No. Doit v1c. Euclid & 1117-1,)11 . guaranlerc! "'ork. Lirt'nsed organizing "" ro-or ina ing COAslal Agenry VACAr->T spar.ious l:iach apl, From $140 . S175/mn. ]j,(lOQ Ml ft . COSTA Ciirrlen Grnve Blvd. in ii in~~d . 675-5740. recreational ;irl1\·ilit's, 27!.K> Harbor Bl. at Af1am1 1 Shag cpl•, drps, 11aun11.•, ~iF.SA-near South Coast Carden Grove. call 10 Iden-Additions * Remodelin& s u pervtsing ma1nten;;nce nr 001 ~.ites !.. r;hopi, util pd pool, jacunl, ~cl. Jtat. Plaza. Baker al Century. lily. 837-433'1. Gerwick & Son, Lie. EXTER. Complete 2 coats, 1 t'ontracts & administn-ing CARPET Cleaner or Helper. SllO. CA.II 97!H.ltl4. I Q .rt Altult llvlr1.1t lmmr<h!1le n cc u p 8 n <' y. 673-fiO<ll * 549-2170 story S2<i0, 2 s!ory S300. daily business. :'ltust ha\'e A1w;t be neat in apprual'lt"t. l BR apt SllS $.)() Clean1n~ MERRIMAC WOODS Jo'OUNTA IN' V , LL E y FND. G<>ld ~·eddin1t banrl J Ac K T I . NPat •,\'ork. Roy, 847-1358. previous exJ')('rlence or Apply 1740 Superior Ave., , • C I ,_ I ~ W " -f'rtgl(IVl'tl \\'ilh D.R.~1 . lo au a ne-Repair -·' . I b k _, f C '' ""'P water paid. a I fl.f1f'r -., • .if', nmae ny. Cl\.1 hellvf'f'n r~m-& \Vool•-. remod 11.dd't 211 PROF. painting, also roofs. ....,ucat1ona ac grou11u or 1 , ... -· .. ·..,..,..,..,..,..,iiiii 5 64' 1963 ""' '-" " \\'.J.E. vie Co111 "'° ta .. a .. 1. Yf11. exp. I I Pl I rl ·; .~ · 1 & 2 BR Furn or unrurn. Hmokhun;t al Hril Qr. C 't~ Aon~ Llc'd. My Way co. 547-0036. accous. ce1 . ntcr/ext<"r. same, ease o r war SPAC Z , 3 • an)'on a . "'.,-,.,.,.1, L•·-11-, 1·r-• ,,1 "''5101 --m ,·-cl d' 1 Clerical . ... Br 11p! $140 up. Chlh1ren'11 11rr!!JJn. Pl'W'll. cupanC'y &>pt. 1. Call Bob ... " · •· · ...,.,.. · · ·~~u e " u ing sa ary !'!'- Pool, cpl/drp, hltn.~. kk11 $1 40 Up. F.L!'.1 r.ARDF:NS \\'1~h. ~6--2131. &II Biiker, F'F.:'lfA • gray Kreshhound. Driveways SE!l.1I-RETIRED PAINTER qu1rem€nts to: Class1fif'11 ok. AP'TS. 177 E. 22nd st .. C.M. Cn!lfll MrMi. l 1M'111·een Irvine i 8 __ A_W_LE_v-·s--s.-,-,-C-0-,ti-.o-; needs 1vork Ad No. 412. Da ily P ilot, nl6 Cnll"t" f'\n. !> 612~70:1:; &12-:1645. * GREAT LOCATI ON Nr111por; ii: 21~1la r. Well I \Veathrr, gas. ()ii rf'sista:t. fi.12-1:B5 ~.o.9:~ 1560 Cosla 1.lesa, LOOKING FOR A JY.16 Mnple Nn. I 642-J8l3 Huntingtol" Be•ch S!ore for Lrase on Neii·pnrt i::rooTc( · ,.. · I Stays black, 545-5195. PAfNTING k PAr.ETllNG.1-'"'-· c-=...:_' ----- I BR w/Dt.n-2 Ba. B!vrl., Cn11t1t .~f.'AA, Crpt'g. \Vl!!T~: Male kitten Vi(': =E7le_c_t-ri~c-a_I _____ 19 yrs in Harbor aren. Lie & ADVERTISING 2 RR. Adults, no.pr!s NEW SANDPIPER $.150. Call j.1~J493. Cnsta fll'rsa P ark. Fnil. bond€d. Ref's furn. &12-2li6. Great opportunily !or highly MOVING BAY MEAOOWS AP'TS 5/15: ~.179. I ELECTRICAL \VORK. All . d · Esrly hlrrl ~J)f!c!a.ls-1 BR RETAIL slltlp a vail. al The d PRO~~. painting, 1ntrr/extf'T'. motivate . highly .o;killed 387 W. Bay St., CM 641i.0073 fmm S125, 2 BR from $155 F·actory, Sl7:'i. mo. See No. 9 KIITENS. i\Jn!her ped1grt'f'd ~n ~,Big or small Lic'd & Quality work. Re1111. Lic'd secr€tary lo ..,,·ork into broarl- 2 BR, den, trpl, pri p3flo, Furn/Unfurn, cool color ln· for infu or 673-9606. Ral irlC'l"e. ~·at h<>r tab b Y ns. ree est. 546--0211. Ins. 557-7455, 548-2759 aft 5. er rP sponsibllitics at fast. clrpa , crplll, ttder.. Alt 5, terioni, pool, Jacuzzi, more. lndustrlel Re nt•I 450 PC'rs\an. M:>-2090. ~ard9nlng No V.'asting pacrd Nc1vport Beach ad- MS-R.1m or coll: 213: 8M1 Holland Drive, Hun. PLEAS!'.: Aave me, beau!. ____ ;.....____ * WALLPAPER * vertising agency, Brains, EXPERIENCE? 592-5227. tlnglon Beach. 847-9595. coirA" MESA 1ipayf'd killy, f11m. 11.llel')':ir, JOHNSONS' GARDENING call' l\ iniliafivr, & sh required. n111~1 f1n<I h'Omc or !??. Yard i\iaintenance, Planting When you , lac·• Call 833-1670 J\.tESA Verde -nr new Jux. Newport Beach 14-10 & 2880 Sq ft. ,...,~ V Cleanups 962-20Jj 548-1444 646-lID ~=~~=:;~~---! urious 2 BR. 2 BA, dshwshr, CABlNET f.1AKERS-"""""5\!l\, F. · • PAINTING-PAPF.Rl~G ALTERATIONS: Person We ere moving our family of 850 to New- port in Sept. You 've probably •••n our ex- cit!ng ne~ building going up 1n Feshion Island. We even heve FREE bus11 to L.A. until we move. You'll enjoy our Inexpens- ive cefeteri• & friendly •tmo1ph1re. Won't yOu join ·us now? trpl., adull.!t. 5S7-l840. ,,OAKWOOD GARDEN ,.-IBERGLASS Lost 555 GEN. Gardening. l\fov.• r., 1 t . F. 1 . needed part time flion-Sa1. PATIO or DEN-2 Br, I Ap•rf~tntt Nr. N111pt frv•y & S.D. Frv.y F.ctge. f'ree rsL Home & Ln erl1or G .x ~rt0~ l\1u~t be f'Xp. in clothing & 2 Ba. Sl50. Adults. IRc!OOrt L1v1ni;t for I ~31 Grace Ln. U>ST: Sml M GPrman Shep, Commercial. 645--0&a:J. C~~j 1-~is ua;~~ mens ..,,·ear. 6i3-R7!12 Call S4&.73ll Arlull.11 Only I ISo. nf Ha.kf'r, F:. o! f11 irvie1v ha ir clirifK'd on bck lri::. Vic LANDSCAPING, New Lawns APART:'l1EN -------· --NE\\IPORT A.E:AOI '~ i\1i/ Repre.~entative there llrbr Blvd at i\-1errimac. &. SprinklrM;: Re s i d• J . 30 Day Special. lnter/Extrr E i 11 ''T ma na g: er · DELUXE 2 BR. 2 BA , trple. 16(h 11t Irvine 9 11ni-J2 noo"'. No.SA 2:irll 1-lrhr Blvli. Com~.. Stal• L·l o • d , painlin,. Lic'd/Ins. l.oC'al xp, u charge !11anagf'r 'DI h h " '"" , . for la.rc;r proiect 1n Costa A was:~~ ~~,.2 Sl!E mo. :"'~5--0~5S0~~~°'~~~6':2~-R~l7~0 1 (7141 979.4134 or S'r.1·47\1 51~9331 bl1\•n Spm & 10 pm. -~-'-''°'-'-'-"------refs. ;l() '\rs. rxp. f>rf'e est. :'I! Sal arr ~411:1 i\lrs. \V11J1am~. Call Chuck 6-\"HJ809 · rsa. ary + ap· mcti1. NE\\' 4,\f Ml fl, 2 ofci; wlhlJt, PROFESSIONAL tree work, ' . : . i\1on Fri, 9 to 4, Huntlng~on Beech 2 toilet& w/hot \\'atfr. 2 o/h Loi;!: J\lan·s diamond ring, in pruning, trimming. spray· YOU Supply The Paint. Rms 213/:ri;>..JSSO. "'"'''' J!,a J doors, J pi't pwr, parkg nr Dr.laney's Sea Shanty Rest. ing, 1"prinkJers. Llindscart-PAinte~Sl5.Ceilings xtrB:30•l·AC:PT='.C:,"01AC:N:CA~G~E=R=s~.~Xl=o-1 -0,,_ ;mm;;miiiiim~·;..;+ f..,.·y. 6i3-14 17 ' or V!<'. Srn!imcntal ktcp· ing, cleanup. Coorg_e~5893 yrs exper. Also, exterior. port n·i f 1 1t.lu;. Rtwarcl . 644-1816. -540-~046 u i Y or ex pe r. coup P NE\'f DELUXE M~l units. 3 ~~~~~~~~~~ j AL'S Lanitscaping. Tree 1 • wi!linit to \lo'Ork. No children ph. flO\ver. 1733 Monro,•ia ;. removal. Y11rd rrmode'ling. Plester, Petch, Repeir or JK'1S 642-3645. ON BEACH! Rooms 400 f'URN. ,&:: UNFURN. 2 BR. f'rom s;ss DE . LUXF: w/hA. Pvt f'ntr. 5'13-3145: 836-9798 e.ves. I JGiif=l· Tra&l hauling, }Qt cleanup. * P~TOI PI.A:STERfNG Apt Development 576 to 9600 Sq. Ft. Wvlc• •ndRepalrs~ Repair sprinkl€rs. 67J-.ll66. AU types. Free estimates. Supervisor \\'E NEED: ADULTS ONLY R.l'flf'c. Nu told crpt. W11lk Furniture Available In bch . Yrly, 1244 \\/.Balboa 4001 Birch, N.B. 541-5032 PROFESSIONAL Call 540-6825 N.B. baserl Apl devt'loper C a r JI ets-drapes-<t!shwa8her -;B~lv~·I~, ~N~B:.,. ~--~~ hflAled pool-aaunas.fennl• ;: nc mom-ocean views ROOMS SIS ..,,.k up 1\'/k1t. $.10 Re nt•I• W•nted 460 Japanrse Gardening Service · \\'/FHA projecrs thruout e Bebysitting free Est. * 646-0619 Plumbing roun!ry rf'q's s upv to COLLF.GE Gr11d \\'i ll houl"r Ex""rl Jap•n•s• Garden•< ·SA---'----. --niana.i;e apt. Design & ron- Sec'y.S teno ()pf'n ing~ av11.il . now: Type 50. lite steno, 1)pe 60. Sltno 90 d · BABYS\'ITING l\1y homf' 1·~ " VE on home repairs. Fref.' ~11 Y & Pf'!~ ol' dn y{j "'k I '. · Complete Yard "-rvice stnu·uon activilies of fnr r1n, J une 'Ju!y/AU". F:. Dllyl! onl.y. Exp. & ~esp. "" est., plumbing, pain!, in-numerous 11rchUl'rts & con patios-ample parklna \\'k up Apt11, 2371> Nc\\·por1 Security Guards. Bl\'d, C~t 5-48-9755. HUNTINGTON DF:LUXE, ,,;, '"""'' k bnlh, m i\n1okl'N:. Costa PACIFIC ""'·'67:Hl.1JO, ;1s..;t01. "' m th th f f' Free estimate~ 646-7624' sf a. J J a t Ions, hauling. · · ;\fuPJIC'r, \\'E'!\tmont Collegr, o er "1. PX. N's. enc-fr actors. Architectural e Genera l Cler' I S<lnlit BarharA, 9_110~. Ai yard. [x. hon1e & family LA\VN SERVICE _8.:.3!Hlc,c3~72~·==~=--I r1;~1gn & rons1r. exp rfit'd. ~lath or Engl i~h•c~ k- env1ronm<'nt. Reasonable. Cul-Edgf'·Trim Dcf)('ndah!e 1 PLU:'ltBll'\G REPAIR K no 1v I e rl.,. e of FHA .......,, nd c 711 OCEAN AVE .. H.B. (714) 536-1487 Ofc open 10 am-6 pm 011.Uy WlLU.Ut WALTERS CO. 3 BR, pa.tlo, encl. ya.rrl. Nf'flr be11ch, parks Ir: •hopping. SlYI .nr suhmit on lt'11.se. Ntt. ~405. 2 BDR:'lt .. sh11g crpts. ,t· drps. Sl.ln n1n. Chlltfrt'n OK • NO fl"!5. C11ll 5J&.j76.1. • HUNTINGTON f£ARBOUR 1 BR. 2 yrs. old.°$147.~. All hl tn'. &12·3.147, 642·5020 evl's. LRG 2 hr i\!ufl io 8.pl f ncit vr!. Sm, t"h1lrl nk: No pe~. $150 mo. ~2-45'19. l BR twnhs'" l\''crpt, drps. hl!n~. 1\•1s~r t.. rlr\-..r palln. Sl~. !l62-684f; a n 5: JO'. DELUXE 2· Br. 14' Ba. ''11.rrl , cir. \\'11tk to heh. SJl;,7029 Irvine PARK WEST APARTMENTS Bdrm. From $160 2 Bdrm., 2 Bo. From $195 m P11.rkvlew Ln.nt Irvt~. (JUST off SM Dleao F'wy •t cw,·e.r Rd) * NE\V 2 BR-hlk to bea.ch, •llf'rl11ru\11.r \'tf'll', S250 up. ~!»-338.t 494-2~. Me•• Verde I N 0 N ·Smnkinl.! gf'nllrmPn 14 d 1 C II 1 6 ,,. 3•66 " ,..uu fM'('('ee Of ay. llol unch $j rlay. a f'vrs a !. . ..... :i-• !\:o job ton sn1a!I ~pt'l'lfiC'ations & proct:'durt"~ , ....... ~ p f:""d · J '· FINE room av;uJ. only for desirf's sleeping r no m , 11 .... ,..:, re .. R ·01 dinner & lunch for CO?.f PLETE La\\·n •· • 642-3128 * rlPs1rable. Position req ·, Sr 0 · . . r. • employrrl n1an nvcr 30. r11snnnhle, 6 7 5-O 3 IO, "' pen1ng• A uJ Cosla i\lr~. 64&-llAA!l. 54s,..7197. 1\lorhcrs "'tlo have la.11' Gardening service. Hauling COLE PLUMBING lravC'I lo supv 15 or 20 proj· · v · ;;;;o;--,..--,-~-~-l~'t!rking day. 11.B. Atf'a. & clean-up. J im, 548-040j. 24 hr. service. 645-1 161 1'('15 in ronslr. U>nit tenn e St t' 1• I Cl k Guest Home 415 TO rent or ISl', 3 Br 2 ba, un-Adams & Bushard. \Vardlow EXPER J Gm:le growth pot en 1 i a 1 v.·lag-1, •,is ica er_ furn home in N.B. or C.M. school area, 968-003. apane:se ner Remodel & Repair gressive, €xpanding rn, Sal a~t'd & lnterf'Sltng *PRIVATE ROOM* tor ambulalruy per.!IOn, Good fOO<T. nice cheerful •urround· lngs. * C,11\1 54~··75.1 • PVT·Srmt Pvt. rm11 f(lr nm· hula1ory 11r. t" i I i z t' n 5, mcnl~·o1nr.n . 881 meals. 24 11.N'a. 645-4099, Complete yd Rrvice. Nea.t dervondent on •xp., obo·i,·1y & Opoo. 1ng11 For Good Math MATURE de pend ab I e. & Retia. Free est 642-4389 e e e e • • ,... t tud So \Vkdy.,, my home. Refll. prrformanCf', Send rf'sume ap 1. e. , . me Expe:r. ~ Feni-ec! yd., hot lunch. NEW-Japanese g~ning FATHER I: SONS -to Classified ad no. 367 clo & Ille typ111g neces.s. Annou11ttrnent1 ] "iii14 54~Hl67. service. Call Decorating, design, carpen-Daily Pilot, P .O. 8':'1x 1560, ;;;;;;;;;-;;;;;~~ 1 • IN f\.1Y ll0l\1E. DEPEND· e 645-2619 e .try. plu~bing, wirln25g,helo .. I .. c .. oii'.ilaiiMiieii"'ii.' Ciiaii . .i9i;2'ii2'ii.iiiim.I IN EXP. Hawaiian Gardener generations exp.· t yr.1, i TERVJ E\\'J~G ABLE. Harbnr·Baker area. Complete gardening service in bus. • Lic'd k bonded, Accounting Cl1>rical 1'1on &. Tues 9 am·2 pm Announcements 500 • 546·4145 • Kamal.ani, &l>-4676. 838-3545 F'EE PAID \\'ed lhru f ri 9 am-U pm Cer pet Service \\'ILL ct€an backyard & haul • • • • • • Sec'y (Marketing) to S600 ON SUl\!l\.tl::R CA?t.tP Boys & ---------ll\\'ay _ also plant ground REMODELING, adrlition11, Rec-f'ritionisl $42:> r-.~i:..r: B~~~"~G hr J1:Ufl('rvis1on. Lndry incl. --------- 548-."122.'i. Nr11· llonif'. Ul\'1'1y lri;:. Rms. l\1~· ~nk1r ('11Lzf'ns 111"1" h11prY. 11·rll frrl & cl<'An. 721 !'h11hm11.r St. 642-9m SI 10. l\IONTI1 UP Stu<lio Apl~. Phone ser,•iC'f', pool. fi.15-.1967. m4 \\'. OCEANFRONT. l.n:'. l br. July S\50 \\'k . Aug. $17:i Girl5 7-13. Outstancling pro-JOHN'S Carpet & Upholstery t.-over. Free ,st. 495-53"8. patios, prompt service. Free APPLICANT PAYS FEE "'' gram-Top notch at a ff . Cl t! an e r 5, Ex 1 r a estimates rcference5, local Clf.'rk Typist S.~20. Reasonable rail's _ FREE Drt·Shampoo free Scotch-AL'S GARDENING bu ildt"r, i-10 p.m .. 96S-9067, Girl Frida.y S413. Bro c hure. c A 1\1 p (tUard !Soil Ret8.rdantsl. fCYr gl!.l'dt!Tling & s m 11. 11 968-0964. Gen,ral Office S4:.0. PACIFIC MUTUAL FASHJO~ ISLA.\'O 1Corner Santa Cruz 4 Xe..,,1>0rt C£'11ter Drive) CA'"'COS c Cal'! Jan<lsC'aping services, call BookkeE'""'r "-c'y ·~ u • ayuoos, 1 • Degrea.w-ni l.r. 11.ll color Roofing "' ~ -•~·~" 540-5198 eve9. Ser v 1 n g 1 Girl Office to s;oo .......... brighteners &. 10 minute Ne"'-port. Cd)f, Costa 1-lesa, • T. G"y Roo"""· n...a1 Secrf"tary S4li ble11ch for ""'hite carpels. Do Sh w 1 Ill! "·~ ~ • nu: ver ores. es c . Dl-t. 1 do my own ··-rk. Other Frtt & Fee JoM. E daily bus transpor-Sllve )"-Our monty by M\ing ...... "" la me .extra trips. \rill cll'an SPRINKLER REPAIR 645-2780. 548-9500. RUTH RYAN AGENCY t)()n for ""-Ork in l.m: li\•ing rm., dinin.it rm. ,\ Ne\V Sy5tems * 546-·~ 1193 Newport, CJl.I 646-4!G1 Angelts until move to New-Stwing/ Alteraiiona 17931 Be11.ch, HB 847_9617 port. Sept. ·n. I~ P1nonll1 hall Sl i Any nn. $1.50, General S•rvlces r~;:1 ~1~~~~r\;:~~~~· 4~s~~ _P_•_•_•0_n_•_1_• _____ 5_3o ~~~h i!10~.~:~ c!~~~~ =-:i Hou~ehold ,.Improvement l -~·,;;;;;f"o-n-s--64-2-5845 i'A~P~A~R~Tfl>~tEfN~r'f"'~,~la~n;:'ag~•~•"';,n~I::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;: R11lt1Cl11. 64~i52 A'.\!'5. LIKE FUN~ mrlhod. t do \\'Ork myself. A to z I~flndyman Ne11.I. 11.ci-urate. 20 ye.!lNI exp. Cosia Mesa. 1-fa!ure cpl. for Cle.ncaJ \l"k, 6~.4-jJ(J7, liiiiii Su mmer renlal-3Rr-IRll. LIKE TO TRAVEL! Goori ft'!. 53\-(JIOL hl<loor & Outdoor painting, Stereo Repair \ntrrview call (TI41 &39-6700 t hlk. to m111n bch. & Bachelor SC't'ks h a PP Y. clean-up & repa.in fro m Assemblers Ch ' rcrsonablf', allractive \arly STEJ\:'11 Carpet Cleaners, roof to la"·n. 839-389.~. STEREO equipmrnt r cpail'!I. 1n11 Covf'. Crl:'11. 67:\-3!1.~2 1J5.50l tntourU.S.A. inlux-pmfe.o;sion11I 11t lo\V f'~I 1 romrilete facilllies for Alf Summer Rent•I• 420 ury mo!nr OOme, Exptn~l's pricr5. 3 a\·~ rm5 completP BY l\f 0 0 s e; Lt. elect, mflkes & nlodels -d iS('Ount pa •d '' ~h11,.ed '"I ••rl•·"'~ $39.95. 962--0672. plumb, fence •. t n st Ins . rates: 8 !rack 111""' d-k. BAY VIE\V 2 btdroo1n, I . · ' · tu '~ ._.,, til BA/:'11C ··~ "'" c ci n f 1 rl (' n I 11 l \V t * CARPET LAYtNG * carpen~•J , e . • clean & adju~t $8.00, this sleeps 4 completrly furnish· . ' r~ f' card. 5.i2-8949. \, ...... k $1.00 off -Daily p ,·10 1 od A . il J t ,_ t 17.,,. C'lll~t;1f1rd ed No. 417, Daily C. A. PAGE .... •u · '11 une 0 ~p · "", Pilot. P.O. Box ·1560, Costa * 642--20i0 * TOTAL SERVICES C'O. re a. cl er s (Replacement Electronic Assemblers 7 NEEDED GIRL FRIDAY pr 1mn6~~h~n~"Adulls only 1 1-lesA. Cllltf. 92621'1. Carnantar I' Plumb~ Install'~ntr)· needles & cartridgl's '.~off). Ri;:"f'n . 1.,....""". ,..~ Elec Repair e ~1809 1 1 U.S.A. SterN'I E q u i p . '~· 2 nn --•·,,. homr. All * "',, 'LLY .LICEN:::. ED • I 11· -~ 179 E !"th s "' "IQ\/ ,. R rn H d s I LARGE OR SMALL 1 1\-lorgan Secretarial a .... ,10use. _ · 4 t., 1 l 1· ·1 Sn th f \I <"llCl 'T1 in u .pirituA isl. Co t :'11 6-t-2442 ;i 1 · ~~ "5 • 8 11 n ,· f''(-1 Sp1rituRl Re11rl1ngs Jn Ven 1\t! Trpr~ \\'ork: Cu! door~. 9i9-8750 s a • esa. >-' P .C. Boarit n:J>er. rn:t'd . CREDIT U 1~~~th . 6-t~~ ~ ~~-~Hl7 daily. 10 A'.\1-10 P'.\1. Arl\·ice pall(>I. remndf"I. f i nish ,, All Ty11.111R • Phot~pits Television Repair :'lltn. l )T. Openings in NION eX• . . . r -·' g1\·en on irJI mR!lf"rs. I can franil', re Pa i rs, f'IC'. Free Pickup & Delivery Anal'lf'-im & "'~"''T>Orl Bi-h. perience pref Rent•I• to Sh•re 430 help _,'{'11,1• %11961 H 1• * BLATh'E'S TV * Long Tf'rm a.s~ignments. er- t 'BR. unfurn ........... $191. 2 BR, I h11th ............ $t~:l. 2 BR. l Mlh ............ $70.'i. Pvt. p11lk)J, lu•h fnmt 8f'I· tine. C"lll"flt'rt~. R'A' pd. DELUXE 2 k 3 Br. 2 BR. "11C'I r Rr. S155 up. R~nt.oil orr. .~ r.iact" A v e .• Mt;..10.1.J. 312 N. El Camino Real . ~-. I au 1ng Sen•ieing Atl Brand~ lnlf'n·ie1\irtg red. Will consider SHA RE ~ Br. hnmf'. Jl.B. &In Clemente F.>..'P. Remodeling. CRbinets, LOCAL ~IOV€s haul i n 1 Authorized :'lfagnavox 9 To 1 P :'lf Onlv ba k" II Evrrylhiniz it\C'ludtd. 3 ~ repairs, m~lnt. No job too • ' Kno..,,·n for honesty 540-4313 S.1.S. T~nv"\RAR. y n lnCJ Or CO K• 402-9136 or -192-90.~ sm. Reas. 646-422.4. I cleanup. Exp co 11 e g e L.~1.--v • yrs/O\Tr. ~87 aft 5 pm student. Lr& truck. Res. Tile SERVICE tiOn experience & all dRy \\·knri~. ALCOllOUCS Anonymous. MINOR home l't'p.aln . Plum-534-l&46. 1424 So. GraM • NE\\'PORT Bt'Hch: bf-a.utiful Phone ~ill.7 or ~Tita P. bing·. carpentry -p!lintlng. CERA~1IC & Vinyl "Nit'. Santa Ana 5"47-SUi 114 E. 401h SI, C.:'11. ~S..fll:'li SPACJOU~ 2 Br. nr 1.hnp~. f'w)11 , O.C C •. '1 U.C.I. S16.\. CAJI 97'--0134. Newport Be•ch Re.mo\"e trees, dirt. Ivy, ,... \\' ~. n. bl ·'"ta e a \, ln.n;C" hnu~<" tn ~h11rt. Pri. i0i .i&iixi l.211iii, iCoi'i"iiMi'i"i·ii~rooiifi;"'ii' iCi'lil i54().S56(1iiiiiii'iiii YARD, garage c 1 ea nu pa. Ki tchen, Baths &. Entrys. BABYSITITR -1· bl I d , room ,f, ba th . 64.')....1123. '-ustom o, .. at n . ..-a.sona e \o\·es c:hil<lren. f yr girl, ~Y !'ARK NEWPORT 51,.,, 1 bdmi '"'·pool vw * * * * * * :.~:~~adu , backhoo. n.i ... Gl•n 5'8·72ti3. home La"""' Bch. $25 YARD &: Garqe Oeanup. 1· · J\IERVtE\\'JXG ~Ion & Tue~ 9 a.m-2 pm \\'ed thru Fn 9 am-12 pm o~ NE\VL '\' Df:C"ORA Tl'.;!' Lrs::. 2 Br "-'lr11r, \\°fr , Prl. CAii l'll\l'T\ 1 f.: ~-1>:16--1110 2116 Pl11cl'11ftR Nn. A • , .$l:t!l. ]!;TI Or11nat' Nn. A ••• , •. St3..i. l1!M Plo\C'f'nt111 Ni,. B .• $130 , APARTMENTS I "'lh ofrl tl>-e. C•ll Harold Wttk, "'"' P""id<'I or Oft the bay &t2·005(l fi.~ 111n. l Free est. 7 days. Call E•)'mMI: 111• 1) ~a~;. ivf"-1n free. 529-jlfi6 Luxury flN\rtmt!nt living OY. Office Rent•t 440 I anytime. 548-5001. . T s"A"a"v"s"'ITr""'°'E"R-c-o-v•"'•--=3-=o-.I f'rlookln~ the w11ter. Enjoy ~I EDTCAL. dt'J1 t11.I nr rt"llil Trader's Pa .. ad1"se Gard('ning. Yard .. Garage reli11ble, n!!f'!. Own 1l'l!.n1 .. SITE OF Ot:R XE\\. BL"ILDC\'G PACIFIC MUTUAL f'ASHIO:\" JSLJ..'l;D ICorner Santa Cruz ' Nf""-"P>rt C.nttr Dn\~l t RR 11pl \\·Is~ II f'Al k>, ll111 k tn Noh, St~. yrlv. Adult C"n. $750.IXX! "'&llh JflA, 7 11v.•\m. ""'111.te. st r, e 1 \•i!tbilitv I 11 Clelln l'p. Frff: Est. Job Wtnted, Male 700 Jile hskping M()n.·Fri. 7:» ml"'1 J'IOClls.. 7 l!ihf\.'1:1 t•D-Parking. 2 at st~ or ~m: Reas. Rates. 64fN488 5:30. 362 Esther s1.. c .r..1. nl-C"Ourts. plu:t mtle1 of hlnf' lnln 1 11.t $:?5'1. lntl I 1" nes Heating ' A ir 1'U. nurse Clll"(': for J)flll-nt 640-0616. blC'ycle traU5, putti111. lhuJ-Or11ru:;tt at ROC'ht:stror, c.,r. Condltlonl-day!!. ~plln!! lunch etc. 5 -'-"'-=""'====~--1 fltboll.M, M"Oqllet. J unior l'• l\i~11.llrtl Rf'fll Es 1 a f e . •·:. day "'k. 638-il.11 aft 4:30. s:.~lJ~~~! * FREE duly b1a tnnspor. Imm Sl&4 .50 ntonthlv; also 1 6-17-2Z21 <'Ir 96J...12G.~. t"i mes New construction or extsrtnc J ob ':¥anted, t=em•le 702 S30 V.'eekly 6.tU.644 tation for •-orlr in Loa $13.'I LRr.. tmmac. 1 BR. and 2·btodroom pt.,ns fl.nd -G S I bldp. Res. or commercial Anit"ln until tr'IO\"f to Nt'C'-0,,~. c11'flf, hl lnl". ~11lrTW"rl 2~tory to1\'TI bo'~•. Ele.c-21c RO 5 Air Conditionln,g, Hti. NEED he.Ip at home! \\11! BEAUTY ()pttAtor port, ~pl. '12. coup\• or •mrih•\"tl1 l11.c!.v Nri Irie kitcMns rr1\'1.~ pa.tto.s APflro~ 4,(X)) ll!f ft office A dollars R. R. Huggins Co. 642-0515 ha\'e Akles e Nurses e Opening tor 2 beautic.iansJ aii]'\"i!~~"'!'~!!!!!~!!1 b._ t'T~\'\5~ ~1 1. 2$72 LA~llt Arii. ,j or bslcoruta.'C'a.llJttlfti, dnt,. h.\_v Aft.A. 2nd flr. AC. At 4S6 N~ m\..:I., NB. Housekttpers e Com-v.i th fo~'1ng. ~ary + Cc_>U.EGE Of hl:ifi ICbool C '' f ... , ,,.,~.. · • ""~L Subtt. ........ an ........... 1'11•p1 A ~n Olt>to ~·y ln-na ruo· ns e Homemakl!n romm Paid Vll.CatiOns oo girl 11.-ant--' b I 1 ,., ,,..,,. .~ ...... "" _..... Hou1eclMnin11 ..--• · ' cu e I n n ri 1 2 BR rlfol lni \\ith ele\'lton. Optional lf'N«I. ample Pr k In I· • Upjobn, 547~1. bf'nefits. Apply in pe."°'1 mid-J_u~ (or nrlittJ 10 .'( apl. lDI !q ft. l'' ms.'d atf'.;a. J01t -•of su.nn. n1 Mon•--mt Ward bah 2 bi\. Pfl'" roaKr:t.. f'uU pr.\ f' · ·~m ==. -------t BR ftltpubl!c.' JBA. formJ LOT 1o1:lth bt'auUtul unob-Dedlceted CNaning 8 0 0 l\.f\LEPER. pt-tirM. 0 )', • '&.... ry , )'Sil c:hildrW:n.. I 4 l lor frplc. mu!-1 lie ~ ~ ashlon Ialaod at Jambo,.. OF.SN IJ*Ce •valllbie pl din nn. lri Cam. TraM for • \VE 00 EVERYTHING • Full duirp thnl financ.W Beauty Sa.Ion. Huntin;von lllif' sum~r. Hn. from 7:U nwt.. SS!!:. l~h ~t. '"'-•, ~11 " and sari Joaquin Kilb mo.. WW prori6e tundtuN sma.llt'r 3 BR .. _._ ".·· ,,. struel~ \it\V of ocean • Rd&. F'lft est GfS.2839 state.rMnts. 613-3006 alt 5 ~llll. H.B. 2nd Door. Tuoes. A)f to l:»-4 PM. MaD-rn. ~ ~ Rood 1 •• h ~-·~ .. ~ " mtns In Lag Bch. Over l!I)' lhN Sac Somo Aft 'pm, ~n, , a .., mo. A:rawet C l'ID"'f'll.-. Vt>rdt art'•. on Ttm•'• 111·11, -'-. ·~-·~· 0-""'-""'~ Plf. . n u. tr», 11 dbU-ed. N!:\l'PORT BEACH availabae. m Ftlrtsf .,-._ ,.. ur .JW' --... ._...... ..... ..... "" BEA1JTY ()pn'ator ...nt!d Must ha\~ OQ 1 .... -. ,... REAun nn. 1 ., 1 811 I Nepi.. mil -1.quna ... c1o. _ Mr. Bl•d<. !>1>&124 A<t. "°"' •• '" m .111!J6. '"""""" 0oon .1c. llesld/ Holp Wanted, M & F 710 Apply 111 ,.,,... a...~ 11on • -,.-;;--;; O:lotftl\porw)' Clrdf'n ApU:. It rental inlotm1dan 2> • 6 cot &nack I: candy com't S5T"7G, 54Ml11. Colllw'e. lQU D Camino c:hlldrtn )Qr edlv'.dtd 1 Pollo<. "1>Jc .• pool. SL\'> --------nu1cK CASH m•chin<~ $1500 val Tnode HA\'& s units. C.M. SS0.000. BAY • Beldl Jallltorlal. AceolllltMt-lr .. S8llO nm ... Costa~,.... ••••loft al tho -.. ~ $110. Call iltW16.1. IRAND NEW ,. "" ""'-.! trtr l!r or botlu, ,.wt)'. 1m 1 ''"de vacant Qi>t>/-lloorY · <tc. Sec'y-BMll S&IJ or ·-..,. ,.,. ., o.,. LRG. I BR. 115Q. &tam coU.. AU, llTILITW' PAID THROUGH A pldi·"P om.,.. hli Font°' pl11.1 "' 'llbmlt. I Re.ldJCamm'I. "6-ltll Sec'y-J.tsal S&IJ e.:,ITIY.,.,.. °':,,. ~ ~ to """" a.. -, frPI~. pri. P1tio, Mlt, ro F\nbhM AvaiLa.ble Jr\)'lhiJ\r Clf t>q. \'ll 5'18·1M4 Call 642~ O.£AN'tt\G Specla.lilt: Wll'f-Stc::1·M&rketilll Rm Beauty Parlour &0-ri1L \lintr. tellln( Ill a • d\lldrtn, m pf!&. 117 21st SlO-OU I" Mo's Root. "" DAILY l'ILOT WILL tndo l'>lil M·-·h vaoand! 1 "°" 1 ~ S..:'y/Bookkttpor to JTIIO • · •booo1 ,.....u Jo doc $, 16-lllf, .YfVI)' ~. whta ._, '-1-•·"¥''"""' • cos money: i'J.. ~' u._~ sl'O\"tS: Sec',.COMrx/AnahtUn -BOOKKEEPER A general JOU Msir. ptm ,_, in this ad. ,,_....... t drBe:t\~. runscood. R•nt )"OtD' hou9., apt .. r •o\."t.M. 774-03t1. Stc)Purd\IConstr tosa'.11 otnet'-Sbtlnz a cC'oon11 addrtsl " ,..._ ~ ~ "11' b I h E'tfboNa" ...,.. 2J1Cll lludi 9 (nr o.c CLASSIFIED ADS ;~,;,~t :::-·: !:: •tore bjcJs., etc. thlll JAl'»a:SE LADY Pn>d. Ma....,. to SUK ro co Iv • b I "1'l)'IOIJ ., 0.ullled Ad !"'-ell. ........ _. -lion alrpon, s. ot l'lllbadto Rdl . mam. -~ Dall> Pilot ClusJ. qo!d lillo "' -don. NEWPORT ttlepboo~ exp. O>nnnlction Pilol Bmi '*-°""'-. -.... ''04SK'" ... u -· -hlliant rm., i:oa ACnON. • .1 ;;.;.....;.==---tiod Ad. • -• ,.,...,,..1 ~ boclqrawld --E11a1>-l;n""n;1u,. _••::•:::-..,...,.,.,-.1 -1ln Dall:r l'tlot jacuaL is-..~~-CALL 642-5&78 * * * * * * ';: :" == m Dowr Dr.~ N.a.. =·~~~ alOTC. ...... Fl '•• 0 MW -. , Mlf. ,.,.. ~· -~. -LI• -'42-317' -~ Salary°""".,.,,. -II 4 ......, aua "....---. Tom P.4.. !I,..... ---·------ ' -.... --------.. ... • Mond.,-, M"1 22, 1971 J[fi] ( [ ,.,., ..... l[Il] [ ml I ( ,. ) • DAILY P1Lor Sl llill =[ ~ .. • .. ~··-~l[Il]~!.:;I ;;";;-.roi";;; ... ~l[Il]~J .__l~ .. ;;;;;--';;;;;" ... ~l[fi]~IJ:J~I --~~]~I.____--_____.]~ H•lp Wonted, M • f 110 Help Wonted, M • F 710 Hotp Wonted, M f F 118 ~Wonted. M •I' 710 Help Wonted, M • F 710 HoJp W•nled, M • F 710 AppllonCH ID2 ~P•u•rn•tt•u•,.•••ml!i"ittl Construction CONSTRUCTION We are now 1111.UlnK our new companies fa cility engaii:ed in Ille production of factory. build tnodulnr housing, Our existing backlog enablts us to oUci· permanent positioris to those who have recent ex- periwce in the following named trades: Painters Electricians Plumbers Rough & Finish Carpenters Dry Wall Mill Work Plee.54" Apply Jn Person 9am-4pm OMNI HOUSING SYSTEMS, INC. ENGINEER: Manutaclwing, or mectianic&l lo deve:klp sail- boat production llne1. Oe!P'ff req'd. Top pay & xln't tu. lure. MacGregor Yacht Corp, 16.ll PlacenUa, C1'1. EXJ~. Lab Tech. and or field inspector for construction material lab. Send resumes lo General manager P .o. Box 2153 Santa Ana, 92707, EXPERIENCED Chainkle Det:ltal Assistant. S e n d Resume to Clas.sifted No. 4Zl. Daily Pilot, &x 1560, Costa l\leu, Ca 921m. .p;.PERJENCED pre·!!Chool ll"ilcher cver 25. Part time. 646-3706. At· 3636 Help W•nled, M & F 110 INVEST IN YOUR FUTURE Full or p/time. BE YOUR OWN BOSSI Men or Women Lease A Yellow T•xi C•b Call !or Appl 546-1311 Ask !or Herman INSURANCE Agt>ncy Girl. Knowledge cl ~·lg fire & Home owners ra!lng helpful. Xlnt opp, Salary OpE'n. l\.tust be good typist. California Insurance: Trvlnc, Culif. Call f"(>m Nutter for intrv"·· 833-9-jSO. NEWCOMER WELCOMCNC; ... __ , ..,._111• l="====,,....---H It 11"· H ""'a..i. ~ R..EJ,.RJGERATOR It Sb::lve , osp a OJ Olteu Prof~ll1lo--' n-11 Esto!• I To Call LOCALLY on new ,.._. •"I' ook like new, $5n ra. 7130 ttaldent families bringtna Sale,men le: broken! The REAL ESTATE SALES \Vf'Shnlnster A\'('., \\"est111, rUt.s & civic info. Good pay. opportunity ii hett? You are OV.1-.:lt 200 wlt&bus, 1lry1·r11, P/tlme. Must ha\'e hllppy neede<I immediately tor our AN NO u NCI NG l't-1't!gerl\lor1 tron1 $39.9;;. tl , . bill rapidly t!)(pandlng Re a I ~ •::. ,.7_. ~~-~~ar, ./ping a ty. E1Utte divlllon. Positive 01>-'".rv nu portun\ty lot advancenlf'nt. NEW RE1'"1lIGERATOR. ~id1• h\ NURSES For appolntml'nt phone Riek Side, 11 ('U fl, 11uto 1h•lro.,i, RN relit•f .. Exper. Aidl'll. Noegrlt'l", 645-40t0. ORANGE COUNTY ~lut cond. $1115. &l·l--ti77. BllJ'Vi!'\\' Con\•. llosp., 205.1 RNs day & L"Ye shift. LVNs Rent wa,her1/0ryer1 Thurin, C.P.1. 540-5690. day &. eve ahllt. Xlnt fr ingr $1. \Vk. ~·u11 1noi111. NURSES Aides ruu & b•"'" Bovorly "'"''· capo OFFICES For • ~19.12tn • Pt/timt'. All shifts. Call Bch, 496-!i786. N~=:· Aid.,, • x per .1 """R""oiiiBiiilN ... SOiiiiNiiii'iiiiS _, SIL VER LAKES Furniture • 110 SOFA 8' & lw.·" t.rat. ncv"r p/time 3-11. Mesa Verde e NEWPORT e Conv. llosp, 661 Centl'r, Cl\f BEACH OVERSEAS Jlas openi.t\i for . , used, both $r~J : M'l\'1ng No'v you can get in at lhe beg1nn1ng of Lake· n11u'h irk~, s2~.. rrl. Pt) . world's fabulous water-!ront resoi-t project 968-7910. FEJ\iALE help 18-2'6, traclive. Arco station, E. Coast Hwy, Cdl\f. !\JORE JOBS THAN PEOPLE All skills &: professions e Higher wages e Lo\\'er cxpeTlS<'s e Tax benefib F~ JARDINE }leader Co. needs • r---"'--CTW'lrtatlon IBERGLASS ~tolders, skill· I · • "'""' ~,..,,~,.... men '''/we ding & CALL .. 1 • .,. 121 Cosmetic Sales Women in the beautiful high desert of Yictor Va~l~y. u·"r"1"10"1'".'-,-:.,-,,,-,,-. .,,,.ro-,-"-'·-:i'°~. T~vo huge_ lakes for \\'~ter sk11ng & s_a1hng 'l'\.,·1n spreu1t11, rnnt thl, '''Ith 15 miles of shoreline, only 90 minutes In.n ip, 4'it'" r>t<isu·r. Blt'nrl"'"· fron1 lhe heart of Orange County, Staffing pans, ~17-t.\'.o new offices no'v in Irvine Center. BALD\\' IN l-~r. l'to\. l'u1r~1. ed & unskilled. All 3 shifts. f b · b'I" ~ ..,,.~ W a r1ca!ing a 111y. 7 5 6 5 Service Guaranteed tia~ ~~la~~~~631 Placen. Acacia SI .. Garden Grove. Until employment accepted Jones Tire Service OVERSEAS SERVICES FOOD & Cocktail Waitress, Requires immcdia!ely. Exper 1617 E . 17th St S.A. Suite 3 exper. necessary. Apply In Person Only 11 A.'l Tire Servicemen PAYROLL CLERK Alley West Re.tail Salesmen 1 Local 7106 \V. Oceanfront, NB Sal & Comm. Co. Paid Brne· Call Lorrainr ----"'f'"/""°Co----1 fits. Apply in person, 2049 WESTCLJF1'' l-larbot" Blvd .. Co~ta Mesa. Personnel Agency JUNE OPENING 2(}.13 Wl'slclirf Dr., NB Experienced Apply In pt'r!OO 10-5 p.m. • 2 Fashkln Lsl., N.B. Equal opportunity employer ROBINSON'S e NEWPORT e BEACH Find out aboul this luxurious, $29 million Xlnt •·0~id, S7'.JJ. li~nrl1<· I d . . , ll\lnt•r $,I(), f\tl.~,· fw·n1lu1•r. ma.ster-~ 3.!1ne commu111ty 1n the 1nak1ng, &l•HMJ3;; nit Ii 11·1 \vhich \\•1ll 1nclude: · P • Homesites • Condominiums • Townhouses • Model Homes i'"H J·:Nrl I i~rovlncilll ct1n1 ui.: tahlr•, 6 t'ht1ir11. <~u!ltum pn1! S·17-:1~9R J\~'.N:'llOHE \\a.,li!'r, J yr!!. nld. Run~ prrf(\·t, ~oo! ("1"u1- cl!11on $25. ~·inn , lhilrl lnr;.:•' l11rid, r \\'U ~h in;.: t'y~·lt' 011ly 2 BABYR1'.!.'M' crU» A mat.. ttt&M'I, like new. ~7-896H ' 112 GAllAGl-: ~Ir: l..ol• or furnllure & 11pl)llul'IC'f'•, tonli, i:nA dl')'l'r, t.:H.li Bf«.I, other 1h·11111 lo 1iur11t'1'01111 lo h.111. St11rl.11 ~Inn. i\lay :.!2nd . llt'lll' uf 61·1 Iris, C.orona c1 .. 1 l\111r. ~AllAGE Salt''. Baby furn., n.rrn 111~. lll rn.·ttf', laffi(lll. & 1nl!l:f'. 1!132"J \Vorrti..111 .. r l n, 11.H. SHI & Sun 11 lo 5. Jewelry 115 w.ddin9 i1 Off! \\'4'clduijt rh1a l'l'l for 11nlr' "J\1 11 hun11 ... ,i;. 1'1Jh1nJ I"' 111 11Hn11y i;f'l t1111o:. 1l1.1n1n111I I~ 1, r:IMll . ll11vi' 11111 nf 11nlr rron1 U:1hll"•·11't. 111 Cn~r.1 f.l,•11,1. S1\V}>; 11hou1 ll(Xl, l «11! ~~Ui-~ilu 1111 G prn & Machinery 116 OXYGEN ~ A1·1·tylrnf' - "i:ldlnK 111111 1•u!tu1;! oulrlL $79.9':1, Af" AHr \\'f'\1lf'r. 7.l:. lllllP'I. $!(1 R'l7-:!0IO. M iscellaneous 118 B kk Taking applications tor 64S.2770 00 eeper \Vaitresses, "'airers, PAINTING or general ba~tcndcr & cock t a i 1 1 maintenance in exchange I las opening for • lndustriol Park 11 n1 Ln. rin~c .t: ~11111. i -0.,...,-------- \Vnsh lnJi 111111· :'.O nun. OOUBU·: h1hnrhl $·1. I li·i~·r This is a licensed real estate salesman's Priv11lf' Parl)', 96.~·US:ti. N1 il ke~ St Can11 n gn 111f' to $700 \\·aitresses. ror apt. 2376 Ne\\'port Blvd. Quiet Cannon Restaurant 548-9755. A pennanent position wlo~ busy temporary help firm. J\fust be able to do P&L's & Unancial statements. Need- ed immediately. S.I.S. TEi\JPORARY SERVICE 1-124 So. Grand 34344 St cf lhe Green ==·=:--=--:--:-'77. Lantern Dana Point. P~RKING At~endants, 1~11 ' time & part time. Apply 1n * person. Tues btwn 6 & 7 pm. Jr. Clerk Trainees HUNGRY TIGER COUPON SORTERS. Nwpt RESTAURANT Bch. Sl.75 hr & merit incr. Pacific Coast Hwy. Familiar w/10 key adder. Newport Beach Pas:s simple arith. test. Ask for Ray SEAMSTRESS FITTER Full Time Apply in person 10-5 p.m, #2 Fashion Isl., N.B. dream. The right men & \\'Omen \vho are PAl/l Pl'fan \\"OOfl t'OnHH'"lfli• hoflrd $8. Eh•1·tronic· c:anmn selected for this opportunity \Viti increase lnhlt'li S200. Fr. p"\v nntl Junk $.~ 'l'oy C"11dlll11r: their earnings dramatically, \vith the best kin1-":i1l:.1.e un. fui·n. i~,c1. anti lof\K 1ra1k'r $R. IWk commission schedule in the busincs!: J\liu::nn W'lx-51<'1'(1() & N'Nli~!. •~illf'ftkin S4. R1k1• ~·nr·ri .. r • Cash Commissions • Paid 4 Times/Mo. fllayi•r $200. 2 Pr. dNIP"ll $1. Book~: h Io a r a p h Jr , $.">O. Pr. wing t"hair!I $25 ra. rhllrlren·~. nnvl'l~. 1'rllool :'.1in k sln!l' $100. 64-1-0321. 2!°1('•$1 , C•1rk !lht'f'I $.1. (jiQ..J5 Call CVC!li & \l."C('kCrMl!I. lnK'k !lrt•)I; $2. ~1r<lll'al • Qualified Leods VF.I.VET turtm soro . nt'\"f'r I dd'ti th th d l u...:·d, $1.t"1; ni.'ltt·h!11~ ln\'1' l:ncydo(l("!l1ug $2 t> a c h, · L&l"Jtf' ~·ho-elbnrrow $20. ~.176. 17822 Gilletto St. Jrvinr Indus. Con1plcx Santa Ana, Calif. Santa Ana 547-5736 FRY COOK-Exp'd. I" u 11 time. Sho11 on:ltT. Apply in person. Seafare R e 11 t . , l\fcFadden Sq. N.B. (nr pier) before 3 pm daily. FULL or p/t1me. Service estabUshed Fuller . Brush customers. 962-0416. F/lime only. l\.1ust be al· .,,,==-:'-'==-7=-,--,-lractivc & neat in ap-PASfE-Up Artist, knowledge pearance. Call Beverly of production. ('114) 831-2131 Equal opportunity employer Sailmaker; f/time n a 1 on, ere are ousan s o eag~r s4·:11 $f!;,: .,·4•lv1•t hl·hu•·k water-spor~s ~rospects who want. lo gel in •·hair, $!:!~; Jnnips, $'.i!O ea. J·:~i'F.N~ION nntJ S'l' F. I' at the beg1nnlllg at TODA Y 1S prices & are 5..~:lkl LADDi.:HS, nil .111ir11 \VOOJJ 501 2'Jth Street, N.B. awaiting a· Lakeworld salesman's call. ln . , ONLY Pritt reduct'l:I 1or Orange CountY alone there are: ltav~ 90m~th1ng you wont in QUICIC SALF; 1212 So. Rou 645-5800. bctw. 9 am & 12 pm. Equal OpJ>Or. "Employer . I"""""""""""""""~ COUPLE: :r;r a in- KEYPUNCHERS Needed l mmediately. All iihirts, must have cxper. xln't earnings. PBX Operator for answering serv ice. Full t ime steady u·ork; .536-888!. SALESMEN Need men who are ready to Jearn the ca.Y bui>lhe.U aHd -~ ·- are willing to train. Must haw good pel'9onallty, be intere11ted in a future, dress • 37,000 BOAT OWNERS & ~.-JJ. Cl~~ll~~l_!d~lkt ll ~1·:.....SI_'>•_'"-' Ann. !)42.Jl20, ·-·-···· ~ • Thousands more water skiers •••••••••••••••.••••• tenance-assistant manager needed for-large project in Costa J\fesa. Painting & repa i r background necessary. S a l a ry + apartment. Mon-Fri, 9 to 4 Zl3/~3.SSO. , Call Sue KELLY GIRL 833-1441 PROFESS10NAL p ho n e solicitor J-Dana 1'91nt, San C\emente, Capistrano are-a. Wtn'k In your own home. Best deal in area. Phone 835-1465 between 9:00 a.m. & sailors · · · GIRL FRIDAY: Get in on the ground Door of thi& rapidly gro\1ring firm. Your good typing skills gel.oi this job \vith a yowig boss. Fabulous benefits. To $350. Call Linda Ray, 54G-f.055 2061 Busines!I Center Dr Irvine and noon. well, sa.lesmlnded. Benefits: Demo., group tns., hlgh com.ml.utorui. Unlimited in· come. Apply In Person. UNIVERSITY OLDS· l\10BILE, 2850 Harbor Blvd., Costa Melia. Plus Lakeworld Is investing millions of dol· Jars more in other exciting recrea tional amenities -27 hole golf course, tennis com- plex, Recreation Center, Overnight Lodge & Restaurant, etc. CREDIT ~1anl'l~r -Exp. \\'omen. Retail je\\"elry, 40 hr. \\"etk. w/be11C'fits. Apply in person. LaY.'llOns J e\.,·eiry, 77Ti Edinger, H:.s. CUSJ'ODIA.'l, local church. ·10 hn. ""'k, good benefits. 3 pm-11 pm. 6-M;-7147 ask for Doo. Coostal Agenry 27!IO Ilarbor Bl. at Adams lf ANDYMAN-pt/limti maintenance & custodial \\'Ork for Pvt school (HB) 962-3343. LIDOS mo i; t fashionable ladies shop has Imm. open- ings for 3 salei;girls. Exp. perf. bu! not nee. • ~fUS'l' lfAVF. TOP RETAIL PERSONALITY e Full ! fringe benefits. Pay open. Call collect 21.1· 7!¥".t-5821 . Real Estate Career New or eXJ)Crienced, join lhe Company that's growing. 11 you do not have a license, check on our I $49 : SALES MANAGER Get !n on the ground floor & start a money· making, happy career with the leading re- sort-recreation land developer in California. Lakeworld salesmen, in 1971 , sold more property in our various California develop- ments than .the ne_x~ ~ companies combined. Lakeworld is a d1v1s1on of Dart Industries Inc ...• listed on the New York Stock Ex'. change, with total sales over $800,0001000. For en •d in Woman's World Call Mory Both 642·5678, ext 330 Data Processing Extra shaq> pl needed to ta.ke full charge of accounts payable. Pay bills, type checks, punch up the data & p~ss your results on an IB:\1 System 3 compUter. Starting salary lo $6&.>. Send resume to Mrs. McOure. P.O. Box 1810, Ne\\'JlOrt Beach. 9'1663. DE BURRER Exper. in hand Ir: Jl01''er tool deburrlng cf preei.skln me- chanical compontnl!i, j 9 Hr Day 45 Hour \Vf't'k Profit Sharing THE I. C. CARTER CO. 671 \\', 17th St., Costa Mesa 546-3421 Equal Opportunity Employer DEMONSTRATORS -cpls ok, Prr. gd earn., no e:icp nee. \\'ill train. 96S-0063 4-7 pm. HARDINGE CHUCKER OPERATOR Exper. in setup le operate "'ith precision components to close tolerances. 9 Hour Day 45 Hour \Vttk Profit Sharing THE J. C. CARTER CO. 611 \V. 17th St., Costa r.tesa 546-3421 Equal Op1X1rtunily Employer HELP! ti!us.t be over 21. Apply In person. 1180 S. Bristol, Santa Ana, HO!rrESS & \\'AITRESS Experienced O\'er 21. Apply in person. Hours open. Loves Bar B Que. Brookhunt & Adams. HOSTESS & 1.Vaitress. Apply In person, Henr y ·s Rl"Staurant, 2122 S. E. Bristol, S.A. I Llte duties in C.M. trailer for Real Estate elderly lady. can 494-3136. L icensing Course Net'<l.ed for Aqua Products. Phone Mr. Mo?Tison at 54MGl3 Full &ales training program LVN-P·TIME -no cost. Management op- & Exper. Nunes Aides, portuniti~. Ask for Mra. SALES: Large long established company. Call on local wholesalers & job- bers. Promote Incentive sale& program. S a J a r y $12,000. Fee Paid. Other Fee Jobll. CaU 549-3061 Jones 1or infonnaticm a t Call Now For Your Confld1ntl1I Interview l\T A. I N T EN A N C E 1'1an· 842-5581, relired or aemi/relired. Tarbell Realtors $100 per y.·k. Some janitorial I ;; ... ;;-;;;;;;~-;;;;;;;;-o;,;;;;-;;;;;;;-;;;;;;;;--., I \\'Ork. .!\lust be. in good Re8JESliie&i;;•---• health. Gl2-9Xl6 art 6 pm. LARWIN REAL TY Call Don Jar.kson, 540-6055 (714) 833-9650 LAKEWORLD i\tA.i~ICURJsr Pt/Time xlnt Resale Div. of Larwin Co. loc. 21562 Brookhurst Av., H.B. Coaslal Agt.'ncy 2790 Harbor BJ. at Adams $~ Mo + 10% groll!I. Exp. in tire sal~. 44 hr \\•k. Pd vac. Sick pay, other benefits. 546-1103. Phone 548-4179. (n4) 9£S..4405 / (213) 592-3211 '1 MATRON $1.75 HR OPPORTUNITY for two Ml E f R R time, experienced Real Es-18.552 MacArthur Bl., lrvino, Collf. xp. or ec. m. In Lrg Apt Complex tate Salesmen, Better than Hrs 9 am·2 pm average commission, com· SALES-Fantutic full t:Jr pi t 546.5025 ~y ~~ .• major ml edloal. """21 llt~g!.!oS-~pm, nee. over SERVICE Station attendant TYPIST/Oerk, Gen'l ofc. ••t:me.~ oppty. or mall· • ;>DO-V\IO.) P · p/Ume, eves & wknds, Ex.. C.On&truction otc. exper. MANAGEMENT TRAINEES NEEDED IMMEDIATELY! Due lo the rapid gro"1h & expansion of our corp. A number of prestige positions are now available. ACT NOW! No Exper. N cc. \\'e v.i:iuld rather train from scratch for the right people. agement. We have some-SALESLADY for jewelry PE'r' only. Neat Jn ap-helpful. Call 54a-8365. thing different. store, tulltime, refs n · pearance. Apply mornings WA IT RE s s, ~· • Drop in and talk it over. .....;~ "''" ~~ ruuu "' 't ....... u. OHO-.>'fV.i. only, 2500 Newport Blvd., """""ktal'· -p I Part _.-._..~----.~ ....,._ .,,, '"' en y. REA S.amstr1s1, f /tim1 C.?tf. time. Fri-Sun. 642-8274. L ESTATE I 501 29th Street, N.B. SERVICE Station. Need 2 \VA NTED full llme live-out -SALESMEN-part tim• Ev• I. \l'knd Meo holtskecper for JoM. N.R. Need l or 2 experienct'd I SECRETARY Neat. Apply in penon area. Must Hice children. ga}espeopJe, Incentive com-Oievron Station, 604 So. ~1249. mission sliding scale plan, Good 5h & typing skill11 req'd c.oast Hwy., Lag. Bch. --,W""A"R::-::E::-H:-o=-u~S-E--person~ed train~ by .a w/exper. in m. ark e. t I ng SINGLE need)e & overlock ' WORKER prof~s1onal. ALSO will tram function&. Profit Sharing. opn. Exper. only. Top pay, Hand in · e.lt 1 1 new licensees. Small office, , Y . u.s1ng ~m oo 11. pleaaant working conditions. THE 646--0308. \\ork 1n Irvine IndWI. Po e.1 · t I S U P E R V I S 0 R'S Complex. rson in erv ew -Ask TRAINING! Frtt clai£es C II 832·19•0 ror 1'.lanager. a ~ U.S. AFFILIATED /I J. C. CARTER CO. ~,:ormp,;~" :n,1~""".,: ATU°".~INPE'.:"'c' ENN~cvEL Brokers Realty ' gales methoch1 le succes! ;;;,,,.-,;--;c:--c==-,--,--1 •o mot.1vat1on. .... Everywhere Trio DESTAL TRAINEE: Your sympathetic nature ·will help you land this fun job. Train in a1l phasts ol dt'ntal orliC'i". Great boss & a gn'at futuf"t'. Some typi~ & general office background rttded. To $350. H 0 US EKEEPER-live-in, Call Mr. Paulson r.to~Fri ••knd.s oft Start 833-9472 847-8507, Eve!I 968-11"" 671 \V, 17th St .. Costa '-lesa . . Pl"• kit. 115 W0!\1AN for p/tlme book· RESTAURAN"T 548-3421 ta1 ~--hil I · keeping, 5 dayz, ledgi:r lo • L.<Uu ,,. e earnin~. JKIStini.:, AIR, misc. record EMPLOYMENT AGENCY Equal Opportunity Employer For appt. call 5e-52.'.l.1 k~ping. llus t he 11:m 9045 Call Lioda Ray, ~ COfl!tal Agency 2790 Harllor 2790 )~arbor Bl. at Adams DENTAL Recept: business exper required. Dental or medical exper de!lirable but not essential. Apply in person. 400 Newport Center Dr., N.B. or call 644--0681. DENTAL Reeeptioni11t: Ex- per. Hunt. Harbour. Call '4&-0617. DEPENDABLE young mall "·anted full time to run er- rand& for rapidly expanding 8/28 for 2-3 v.·ks. Ov.-n trans. w.,,, open. trvm. --MECHANICS .7832=-8408=~·==;:-c--,-~ I Aggressive Trnnsport11.tion llOUSEKEEPER I cook I Co. nttds good Diesel aide ror in\•alid mother & mechanics. "'"· Ll"" 0"'· 5 d•y •·k. FULL & PT /TIME $300/mo. Call ~7864 after \\"e an flexible on hours. 8 pm. Call ~ron.·Fri. 10 am·3 pm 1-IOUSEKEEPER ror pvt 1714) 8l5-3722 home, P/time I: F/time. Call T.4-0321. • l\ledical At!endant Apply in Person HOUSE\\"ORK, experienced, 4(.00 Hilaria \\"ay part time, 5 day v.'l?ek, own Ne\\:port Villa, 1'ev.·port Bch. car. 644-7344. ftlrs. Hoover + 642-5861 H 0 USEKEEPER. live.in. $425 Mo + 10%. Grvyd shift, care of toddler. Young girl pd vac. other lx?nefit!I. pref"d. 6/.>-8854. Jacks Phillips 66, Balboa Bl & Cst H1''Y, NB. Need• ca r . IRV1NE PERSOONEt. rompaoy. SCO\IV'"CC l'Ar'C•trV 6-16-i473. UVl\.,,.LJ '""-..IU"f\-1 NEW FACTORY EXPANSION OJSTRJBUl"ORS \V ANTED Exec. l\lktng Ste)' to $675. Nat'! orien1ed finn, P/tlmt ~farketing Secy to $600. $503-$650 Por Mo Full Time " or tulJ. Seltt1 your O\\"n Legal Sttretaries to SGOO. Master Chef ••• , .• 11100. mo .. ...,..,..,~..,..,..,..,.., .. I NOIV' = · · w/numbel"5. Irvine Offil'e Asllt. 7-fgr, ......... $650 mo I SecntAry .... . Asst. Mgr •••••••••• noo: wk: Un. on Bank SUPERVISORS. a a i I b o_a t ,,.,pplie1, 1B07 N~ Bl .. 2nd Cook ••••••••• •.$25 shift .1 prod. Supm.'1.sory s k 1 l I C.~1. Fry Cook ............. S2. hr. Has a unique opportunity far essw ~at bl_dg ~P-not cw""'·o"M"Al_N_to_H_v•-ln_Ch_r-,rti-.,-, I k This princca pant 1 u 1 t Pantry "-'oman • • $21. shilt. an reqlr." We •·UJ tr a In . homi' 1 d . MS-a124 eeps nght on ltOJ./\R from Pantry Man •..••• , .m. Shift Executive Secretary MacGregt:Jr Y~ht Corp, ~~ua nve. ' no-w to vacation time S(>w 11 Fast Food Mgr Sh~ ml15t have an attractlvt 1631 Placentia, Of. and t!reu verskin. lov In Over n , ....... $400. mo. appe~ce. Excellent tYJ>-TELEPHONE Sales. T knit-to-flt p:ilyestcr!'L s o Wailers ................ Scale l~g •kills. Expttience de-oommiulons l.Dd boma. A":,. l ll&.._ 1 praetica1! \Vaitresses _ Continental sirable. Please rt'.lntact Ter-pl betwee 9 00 • ~ 'Y Printed PatteTn 9045 : N"Y.W ................ n.65 hr eM \VaLu. 610 Nev.-port Y tn penon 8381 "aoisa Jtalf Slies IO'h. 121~. 141,.,, , U'aitttsses. All Shlft!I · Center Dr., N""'J)Ol1 Beach. and l2:00 noon at 1611,, 18~. ~'4'. Sl;r,e 14'2 Food & Cocktails ••. $1.&5 hr. l An equal opportuni!y em· Avenut. Midway City. Antiques IOO I bu.st :rn pantsuit 2i14 yard• Hoslesses ............. 12. hr. ployer. TIRE SERV. MEN 54-ineh. Cashier .............. $2. hr SECRETARY • Some 11h. Apply Young &. Lan~ T!l'f'f!, SCRAM LETS SEV£Sn'-m'F. CE!\,.K B?sbo)-11 ............ $1 .65 hr. some rut typing, 4 g1rt ofc. 1596 Newpo,rt Blvd .• C.~t. • for e1ch J>l'ltll'm. Add 2:i Di..shwuher ••• , .•••. Sl.65 hr. Gd. typing i;kllls It alert Ell:pe~. prl'f ~· tull benetiU ctnlll fur .. ach patetrn "1r FEE telephone \'Oiee. Knowled~e ""/paid vacatlOru. ANSWERS Air Mall a.nt! Spccial llal"l<fl· ROYAL SERVICE AGENCY of figures helpful but m t TRAIN AT $700 Ing; othe~ thlrd-cllUl:A For P.estaun1:nt Penonncl nee. John Barry It AMoe. Per Month lfanger _Curve _ Depot_ delivery w1il take tht'ef'" Dl'I Redhill Avenue ~fan agement E~r.1. \\Ith LEADING LIFE INS. A!nund _ HER In BED 9.'ff'kl or matt. Stnd to Esplanade IV, Costa }'lesa :mo Ne'A-port Bl., ;-o;.B. 00 Sl.5.too Potenlial !st <>nr v.ay of having lht> kit· MMl.tn Martin, the DArLY 1 Suite 210 557-ZVf.KI I 6i>.~J. ye~. Income continuet to I rhrn lo youneU In the rMm · ~.,~; ...... °"1l2, ,~:'~. Oep.s~ SECRETARY/Ofllee ~!~ .• grow \\1th rmewal aerount. i~: '"Takt>theoofftttolft:R -,. U1 • ., '"" RECEIVING CO""'rate o ff Ice : reoen. Oppty Qf • llfelime Cl't'altd in Bf.:o . Yi>rk. N. Y. I.Mt!. Print l • 10J0.20Y, '"' 1ff i...i .... 1lf i...-r'- locaUons. C<>mmi~lons to Engineering Secy lo '550. O\'fl' SlOO a d1')'. Students or Secy/fastUon Island to $.lSO, Call nc Gen'I ~laries lo S5X>. hOute'Ai.VCS ok. ( I p ... ._.11 ai..i.-/NCR to SS5(1. 548--4144. • ""''"' ........... ·,..... ,. NA.\lf:, ADDKESH w I 1 h Young men·me<:han1caJ app-CLERK 1ion1~ dulies: Rood shrthnd: by expana)l'Jn program. Call Aft\10 IP.E, O.Jc table, ZIP, ""1Z£ and frn'LE I titudf' htlpful. but not fit.st, aCC'urate typist. ahJP to Mr. Fteundt M4-Sb00 chAIMI, bu lltt, dl'f'™r, N'L')llJER. rt'q'd. 1-lusl be 19 ~r ov"r. 1 1 E:Yper. in receiving lunctioru l"di1 Ar rompo!M!'. $700 /\lo. Ort1de-nla! 1..Jfe, N. B.. deik, misc. DJ..9199 SEE MORE s P 1 1n1t Payroll Clerk $450. DRAPERY ·CARPET Salts. ACOOW'lting Citric to WM:!. Exper. decorator type P8'" Prod. Control Oer1t lO $4.ll. ton for active ak.ft. Xlnt Girl Frida)' $5CWJ, draw + comm. 492-2254.. GtnuaJ Office U00. E•rn $700/$800 Mo. ~1:.. ~.... :,,,ic;_ ~ Day •"ftk. No n:p, Mlllt P/tJme Gtn•1 Ottitt $2.88 hi-. be O\'tt 6' • wtlll111 to .-ork. Ott & Fee Posltiona ~ble to start .,~ 1mrned.. in man u I• ct u r i n&: of ~:~te~il, 6"-78!ll, Nev.port TYPIST Appliances I02 ~~~Ill ~ c1·~:: ~ 1f a("(.'epted. for Job t~ mechanical componenu ,...,.,...,, .. .,...... '"'"' ...... formation· with abilif.)I to rt ad SECllETARY: \\'ould yoo Rl-TIUC1':KATORS, ''"ash-59r1nic·Summt:r Cata~ AU Call Tuts. 'am-1 pm -~~"_:_:_,"551,. =-• e NEEDED Two Offl .. Glrl1 blQtprlnts. l.tke to work for one of tlM' . loeal """'· d r )'tr a. D:I & llJI, Jius! <mly SOe. re.ally big firms with big Many ope~ with Guanntttd & deltwred. T.NSl'ANT S'EWJSC BOOK 9 Hour Day G Hour Weft Profit~ eompany bener.ita " a compan.lel. LntertttJnr long 646-iJQ) '"' loday, wear tomorro.,.,, chance to advaJ"ICt! Sftl. ttrm positions '\'&U. Im· $L Call Nancy Ma.y, ~ medlalt'ly, Top f>a)" ~tAYTAG ~pe.1.rman hu IN ST .A NT FASllJON. 1,..o.... ... iil3ii. ii5""4~l"S6'!'.~~iiii I 4811 E. 17fh lat lrvloel CM * EXEC. SEC'Y Mi-1470 Editorial l. u.Jn oftltt. 1 -~ • ~tcm bl! 25 and able to drt1o•t -APPLY -TIIE Coecta.J Artney S.J.S. n:tifPORARY ~a!ben llSo. 10 $100. Can BOOK _ HW>dn:d.s 0 I _ Ila~, BJ. ot A"ams SEr.VlCE r!(oll\Pr 1'""/I )T. """11· ="=~=~·~==,_,.-=-" -1424 So. Cnnit m.1r;~. r.utiion fAC"t1. SJ. SECRETARY/GU-I f'ntl&y: Sama Ana ~li'-S731J t.:J.t1.TftlC "'' hn. [)ryf'f. F'fonl "Ort.ttmu -1\t c:lrtffo," Educalional •udkn-i.&'Wll co. IDEAL opportumty kw' mar. L)"tt'WTI Production.!. Jnc. rird woman to build JttW"e p 0 Bo:< 1225 L&rlml hmint• •hilt conlributhlc ~ Ca. 9a652 IO ramll}' trx.-om.. write ' ' ' ' ~wtieiefi., JJ6 A d t: I i n ~ , ta E. 16th St, C. lot. J. C. CARTER CD. m w. 111h St. Cana Mesa ~1 O.Oy Pilot Wont CT'l'all\?'. xlnl t y p I r 1 . TYPIST $.SOO \\'h~'"· c•~Uftll condrUon. ltl outrrown W •lt ~>'®can ~·coiogica.1 oH~. Appl) , rri\ ,,. put)' m-;o or turrl "'truh to u.11" In a 1?U1 597-UDS Will t1"IJn on :\ITST. Xln 1 '-':"" .. !~ .... ,_ r...-, DA.ILY Pll.DT claudj..,r iad bl:ne.fita. Local aru. Call ~·.r•.i-._ --..____, AdJ baw: ZfM. "41B», CaJ f alt Em· kJ::t"RIGiR..iTOR. t )TL -t'lll 612--Wll I ploymm: Apniy, !m No Qlr! 1 dn. auto dtf~· --------- Pert Pair! 7486 &tfl<k'B~ Arrr;i•·t \rnll1·~ 'n' 1'0m· plim1•11111 1'1 l!u~ pr·M pair. Turn a 11h1n '11" itkJrt ltllfJ :1. grrat outfit v.11h :ilry. r a!ly· 1·rocht'I tnp. ck.rhl', U!W! Z l"filor1 11pr1rt yar. Pallf'rn 1-wi . l•1fl !•ine 1i1.e J1h1 MlsM'I' 11-141 . h&I S, M, L Ill· clodt'f/. ISEVEN'n'-F'IVF. cr.N'J'tll for each paUt"rn -add 25 cents ff'lf' e::u::h pa.uem fnr Air Ma il and Special Hnn<il· Ing: olh"T'Wlle thlrd-clnu dl•llv1•ry 11;ill takr Utrf'll ~·P('ks or more. Srnfl 111 Allee Brook1. the DAILY PILOT 100, Nl'(lf/lrr-r;1 rt Dept., Boll )6.1, ()Jd (11f'hW:t SUtlilJn, New York, N, Y. JOOll. Print N1111t', Adt.lrr-, Zip, r.tknt Nu111llt'r. t..'EEDU".cRAtl '72~ Cro- chtt. knit, ''"· frtt d irec· tlont:. 00 ~- NEW! l mtant Maf'nlrlf!. Buk, f.anry knots. pJll,.rn,:. 11. F;,,u7 A.11 ot Hairpin ('",,,. dtM -Vl'tt 26 1l .... 1~n~ IQ nu.Ice-. SI lmtallt Crnrhftt Kt.... -lam.,,. p l(1111• ''·t"••ma. ll Con1fllelt! l••la•I fiHl 8oofr -more than lllJ 1t1ft•. -SI. Camplet. A.llP;111 &'* - ll. II llf(r Rur I~ -~ ""'"• ~ .. JI rrUr Af1..._. 50 c.-mlt. Qdl a. ... I -iD pllltrtTIL IO ... 1.1. M'"""Wn Quilt &rA t - 50 ~i'l Qtdlh " ,., •• 1J,.,,c -l5 1-:aut.Jul r~lll"trd. :.0 -.. tM-GSl. OUJud. c.. -· 11·1 &Jtt,"l;)"'I the ria:hl time ' el"'>• the r1aJtl pt.,. H )"OU r.u1i RESULTS! Call 6Q.66il • pl&c:w that Id tocl.<yl l:qual ()ppor1unj0y Elllolo>'n' barialrts -.. Euclid, S0!1' A. Anlbotm. !JI ff •••••••••••••••••• • --' DAIL V PILOT MondAJ, May 22, 19"n I --1~1-~--.1~1 l[iJ I l§J I ............ ~· -. •·· ' l~~~~l ~~J ~~ l§l l .__,,,,._ .... _ .... __,I§] I .,........ I~ I .,,,.,,.... I ~ Ml1ctllt MOU1 118 Planos/Org1n1 826 General ~~~~~~~~~ ~-...;;,,~~~~~ 900 Cycles, Bike•, Scooters Truck& 962 Autos, lmpor1od 970 Autos, Imported ---1'-----970 Autos, lmpor1ed TO YOTA 970 Autos, tJse-d m.:REOS 1972 C.trranJ rqu1pped wlU1 Jull •l.l.t proJ1·11tlon•I HIGHEST CASH COMPLETE YACHT MAJNT. * "'" """'"'; """ '"" .. '.\lonthly ralP!;. 67~ TRUO<. lllllman (Commtrl Van • 1962 1Z12 So. Jl.09.I St. Santa Ana 542-llJl IMW '69 BMW 2000 Sod. OPEL CHEVROLET ch oni,:Pr, AM/F't.1/MPX rt't':•·h1••r, 1 ta I c d air PAID * Bo., ts/ Marino ~11nl Bi.kt for &alr, rood condiUon, Brigg1 I Stratton 3\.1 HP, $45. 646-2169. Ford f'-250 Flutbed, p/1, p/b, air, radio, ovt>rloadl, o\•er· •il.e tires, 646-S ns uk lor Rich. LI> mi'a. 1544-6697 aft 5 ' 1 0 I C 1900 :71 COROU,\ irm Dd'" 1 pe pe P.ad1als. ,\~I F.\!, Sl •i.'!i. AulD. Tran. .. 4>w mL1e11ge. Call s.t7-23:.!j, llUSlll"rl'olOh ~pt"U.kmi, tapr COAST MUSI C Equi p. 904 2 lOOci: YA.\fAHAS. l llonda 70. 3 blkt trailer. Top Cond. &I0-85il:I lkaulitul Bronze F1n1!>h \vith white inferior. Extra CITROEN VOLKSWAGEN d1·1·k & h1·11drhone plua: in •·or yriur p!nno: !)pl111·Ul·Con· Jt1C'k,!1:. \\'ll~ J(·fl unrh1lml'd I ii0lea-Upr1r.ht.-Crands. llr111nl r11111• !n hl'l,'( & 642.~ gUht'lln!r•••(I. Or 11;lnnlly prh:+ • t'1I 111 $27'J,!f.i. T11kr <Jvrr for 1 ll~ I 11\AfMO~O. Perf~l \v/ s:xi !'O.'!.h 1;r 1nnti!I l'){lyrnrn!ll. H!rin~ baAS, Sl.!>XH, l..UH!-i-rrJt 1rup~ hO!h f'IC'w & u11r1I + a.II other acce. M.'j·23!XI or 6+1·5255. Mobile Homes 915 Auto Le11ln9 --------1 :.B.:.:0•;_11;:. • .:.:Po.:.:w..;•.:.:• __ 'ID_& SUNSET MOTORS New 18' Eldorado rtfINJ fl.fOTOH HOME. Fully sc.·U contained. •213207. ILEASING] 964 Citroen Sportt Maser•ti Orange County headquarters 1 for local &: E1.1rop ean 1 delivery. Clean. (JSSCTD J. $1980 COAST IMPORTS I. u y Aw 11 y 1>.:•11t,rtnicn1. I CONN Thcntcr. $1,345 22' Cu~t()m F1IM·rKlru11 ~port fisher. Arand flt'W 71411\~l'~-OSIJL Tlf()~AS lull con11. $1.~ \VU!~I. plhyer drmfl. S l.1 ~4 Nu piaOOll, No short i.:ut9, $j'.19 Cornplt·ll'ly 1·tlulpped -~1ust ~ar1·1lic·€' • S9/l;..O. Or ig Cost $12,tKX). 6'16-G.1'14. $6995 Jim Slemons Imports 2201 So. 1.tain, Santa Ana 1"ry our ltase exptrts tor 557-5.242 Open Sun. Savinp • Satlsi'action • Ser- vice. *AUCTION * DATSUN & ApplJ ;u11 ,. l\1,1ctlon.11 r r11l:i)'. 7 1f) f'l.m. Wind y's Au ction Barn 20i11l Nrw11nrl, ('.\! li1f..PJ",&i <;ouLo i1ustc co. 201i"1 No. A111ln. S./\, [)17.QG.'!I ,,. • Slnt·t• 1911 20:-1 0. bull! for ull shori> fL,h1 n1e, Jn water 111 !>llp 41, Brt.ysldt Vllloigr, Npt U<:h. f.Jt·fa1l."! on OOat or call _&l_~_>_1H._S_2J95~,;~~~~ Complete line of El Dorado <'a1npers, chassis mounb & 5th v.'heel trailer. 1972 SURVEYOR 20' l\10TOR HOME $7,495 \VE LEASE AU.. POPm..AR 1972 MAKES AT COMPETI- TIVE RATES, Call MaJoolm Rtld for further dttal1s. THEODORE ROBINS FORD 2060 Harbor Blvd. '70 Datsun Pickup with Camper ( 036B MY ), Pt>rfect condition. PEUGEOT 1.;r!1lnd ·ronv'11 Bld•• ~!:11·1 CARPJ<:"f 1.-1'1lt> \\'n rrhoui.r ~:111• S/lr><'1;iJ~ lnr n·nl ·1I 11•11!!1, l1i:1t1-, & •·l'.lrnp• r~ :\i::7 R1r1·h No. G. J\\1pt it(·h ~111-1.llO. (;·:l\IJUl\TJl)N Spl'l'I Ol: ~·:1ri1:1.~l 1r <::1rr~1ril 1·:11ulrr m(•nl, r.:J!•f'lrtir1J111n1e hr1ff\!' com11onC'n l '-Y11 t1'n1. Jnrlurll'!I: JOO w II 1 r ~. AM /f'M/f-."TF.Jtf':O/t.1VX, II trn1·k plu!f full K1r.r 1 :or· rarrl Pn_1 f1·i;~inn11l 'l'urnl;1 t11'•, U:iur11Jy HllA for $:l!lfi.:1~ • GraiJu arion Pr11·t• $1!t7A!! 11r 11mn!I monthly p;iyr1n;nts 11! $9.00 USA S1tTl'C1 f.qu!p Wnri: housr 179 E. l71h ~r. C~lll. ~11'.'Ka, frl~>-2 M2 BOOKS!lf<:l=VES--11nrf-2 Sl\11\LL IJESKS su1!11blr for *PIANOS*ORGANS* Goin~ Out t'ur Bu:nm·ss B1·st qunlily • flric<'s . bl'rv. K1Jwai ·Strinway·B:il<lwln, l'IC Player Piano!! & Ttolls fl.1 •nlal:i . , . \\'<' Buy • &-·It Ouity 10 6 F:vt•Y/Sun 12·~ Jo'JELD'S PIANOS Cn~IU ~l€'AA (711! 615·:!250 Kl .\1BAT.I. ,tpi!'lt·l piarn Y.'J!)i ))l•f\f•h. ni,ahog (.~ilor, s2.·.-0. f.12-1112 S..1le or tra1lr 18' CC, el~ i;tarl, 40 h11 1•n::., many rxrrn!I 5ZJ·1~C'J, 67frliii54, ('hul'k IT\\'halcr. 3.1 hp. Johnson. 1\1o!d1'(.! !W'<i1S • Sh o Ck !r111J1·r. l!2',,{), 83j..3Jj() or fi7.'...4}.JG7. "'------1 K' S!;JN.'tl1fl, 1/n, J:..0 hp ~l l're, r./1 radio, !Of1 & sldc rur1alr1i; !Ir. S l ,200 . \VF: Bt1y grund p111oos -ri-lf!-IC26: :_ ___ _ l'r:;~NV OW~l.F:Y R?2-3:114 34' t:uh1n Cru1!1Cr, sips 6, 11. •. i2 Bi:"..ach Bl~"itanlon I fully r qulppcrl. J..ike nf'w, llAflY GnAND l'JANO flfi2--S130 nit 6 JHTI~:--- JO:t1uny fin1~h. Xlnt cond. i6'C;ra~par, 65 hp f.Tercury S600 * 1n.16.1."I__ o/h, 4 yrs old, fu!Jy equip. /'JtlVATF; I'l\RTY WANTS 'l'O BU)' PIANO 1'1Jlt CASI I. X35-22711. ----TV. Radio, HiFI, R-12--51 15. 12' Aluminum Roat w/3 hri Johnson mo!nr, hoth xlnt cond. $300. 97!)-1866. Ste reo 136 Boats, Rent/Cnart'r 908 Roof air, & fully self oon- 1ainc'fl. #2001. Phone 645-f:i6T1 1~0 Harbnr Blvd. Costa l\1esa Motor Homes 940 13C1 llarbor, Garden Grove- l Blk. So. of G.G. F?'\\y. 636-2333 ex1 ra s1oragc• 11pnt'e In yoor ---------II AVE *Marvin Pearce* Motor Homes Sales • Rentals B 0 AT-W I LL 558-3222 gnrnge. 1212 So. K'ls'1 SI., Sanlu An11. r,.12-3120 -A~Il UICK MOJJEL32t!- TRAVEL Sport fishing Cruisi ng 1411 S. Village \Yay, S.A. Cosla Mesa &n-0010 Autos Wanted 968 \VE buy aU makes of clean used sports cars. paid for or not. Plea11e drive in !or free appraisal. " NEWPORT :· IMPORTS I 3100 W, Coast Hwy., N ewpor1 Beach 642-9405 WE PAY TOP CASH tor used can I tnlcks, 1tllt eall Ua f<.t' free r stlmBtH. GROTH CHEVROLET $1990 COAST IMPORTS 1000-1200 ~.Pacific Cst. f.Jwy. Newport Beach (714) 642-0406 546-4529 '71240_Z_ 4 ~pd dlr canary yellow, plush bllc interior, mag wheel:i, lrnt & rear guards, Jow ml, sacrifice! ET8089, 546-8736 aft 10 am 494-6811. LUMBER rack for Datsun P/U ll1ith nylon camper cover 548-31'2 '67 Datsun 1000: 4 dr Sein, good cond. $495. firm. 548-1610 FERRARI ;1 l't•tlll:\t'ntnl \Jai-i\ J:I * PEUGEOT * '63 VW Conv. $500 l.n:td•-d. int<' nll''1•r. 1•rivarl' 6~1-C;\jQ J1olr1\ ;11· .1.i-1·.:i1_: ___ , ... ~,o~,~,; ;~,,::,_::, C:"~1t"s"11"o:c1 ">-cin=-n. I -CORVETTE M low u $2,299. (Ko. 5545) Bt>ige 11. hrn inti r. Jun. FRIT"': \VARREN'S 675-6'1l 7. --------- Sport Car Center .65 v\v canip<:r 11 ·i;i 1 11~. '66 Corvette e ORANGE COUNTY'S Hoof rack, gd lirl•s. J~ 11 1 !-;pd. f\\l/l·'~I. 1lll.i'/P.Xf.l. LARGEsr Pvt ply, l::l'CS & Sun 616.::.;Gl :-;..·!,' 11 1111 l•·;t 1!1·111• tl.litoy., TIO E. ls! St., S.A. S.17--0764 (.J 59 0 :::c==-=cc.:::::c_:c__c_:c1·6s nuc. Xl11t cond., 111·11 .... PORSCHE "'"'· ""'; j<«I '""'''"'" -COAST gone thru. '.\Just l>t'll. S~J'.1.,. '71 Ponche 914 Bc~t offer or Ir ad('. ~"'=-~·--~5~~9=:~~~-cc-- 5 Spd, AM/Ft.1. Very ''cry '6;, V\\I, Can11wr 7,000 \!t. ;;u1 IMPO RTS lo1v miles. Bcauliful Red lliOO c.c. l'!'bu1lt f1'\g111c. 1\1'11 F inish \1•/blk in ter io r pa int good N;Jrid i1ion Slli.'10. t91Z'.l12). . $3490 or offer ;i1;i..-0,111 <L!h r Ii Jl)()(l.J~oo \\', i':ti·ific r.~1. lhl'Y. p.nl. >.:Cl\JltJfl J},•:ic h ~j] ii 612-0•100 COAST '6j V\\' lius l'l·b!t t n:.:. ~r ll ~•\fi.,[,2'.) guarr. tlblc bed -SI t 5 0 . '----' David SJ3.&128 tl:.iys 6i;;--e;;i:.i COUGAR eves. ________ ,.,... IMPORTS 100 ,,,v 11 b " 1.1, _ !!If.~ corr:,\1t :n2. 2 hhl. ~built en;i~; ~ra~c~. ,;_,::r :iu:o ,1.r1"1"1' :,.1 1 1°11 n:i1 10 1:;. '~~;L: I 1 SL-IJU j 111p .• 1 '" . ~ -N• , rac~ r:.adia s ' u·ni. .\:;;.'.::'!70, 11f11·r S • p m . ·rop Cond. S·1fl5. &12-R!l8J \\'innl'r nf hrnnd nt'w Admiral fX)rt. 19" Sola.rcoror TV, v.·/ rf'motr: rt·h1il11 $441: v.·ltl Mil ror $::49. \Varranty. 67:J.4fl51 nfl ;, pm. ~-- 646-0010 644--8211 • NE\Y 23' luxury mo!or :_:c_cc.c__ ___ _:"'-'-_:: 9 : I homes. Air. Loadi'd! Best Boatt# .51111 ..,v rales possible. Prl pty s,_ 968-1397. Aak for Sales Manager 182ll Beach Blvd. Hunttniton Beach 1000-1200 \V. Pacific Cs!. lhvy. 675-iS14. ~:::0.-~li:'l. ---------N~·port B!'ach cn4.J 642-0406 '65 Bus, erp\t'd, panrle1!, 11.iOU .:_:::_;_c_D_O~D-G~E~--'69 Ferrari, 365 GT, 2 + 2. 546-4529 Eng. Gd e~rid. SJ 1 2 :1 . silver, Ai'11FM, air, full ---------• • * WET SUIT • * f"ull Jen1:th. Mu~! :o;i•!J $20 2.11 C !>·lower St. c:o:oit:1 Mr~r 12" \Voofcr, 5" tt1Jd., 3~~" 1'11'rf'll'.'r. Boxes n e v e r opened. Pair m!'W \Vharfdale 11rieaki-r11. Sold $:{;0, Take $175. cash. 534-1178. AU slfE l R'·World C~mplon TE_S_T_D_R_l_V_E __ TRA VELODCF.;. 3 matt11 • 847.6087 KI S-3lll \llE PAY TOP 001.J..AR FOR TOP USED CARS PW1':, new Mkh•lio, 714, '68 911 TARGA '75,-0ll6. '£9 MONACO 675-6410, early morning. 5 spce!d, air cond., ma,.,. J96S .V\V Squa\'rbnc·k, (·!r1:,1_1. nJI gear, sails. trl. $2000. THE MIDAS MINI New 18' RITlvln1t llOOn. MOTOR HOME If YQur car Is extra clean, Sl'e US first. ' d / · 1tr · SI I I Di-. If, Tof', ell!"., 1111-1 nir, · FIAl wheels. Must sell. Buying r~ 10• nciv 11· 11 1·~. • '·1• house. 826·502'1 6 .~-tTI.:::,:4:-~~--ccc-lo..'ldl'cl. Undl'r 26,000 ml. 311 C11.lib<.>r pi11tol -Cini')' Cn"11 Jlrglllte1· frir s11 te, 97:>-'"'; ;-ll'& ln lo hr thit1. , • , The Diet \Vork~hop \Vny For ln formcarlot1 ~.Jl-5Hl5 Cl\l\E.'\, Cui.lnm l\1ndc for 1111 ocraslons. Any 11lzt. Jteus. 536--7725 or 9G.~ 7715. -ELECTRIC .FANS 1212 So. Jto~1 ~t ., Santa Ann ~12-Jl20 •-~~--~~ CA ltPET Sl\1.E S2.S.1 per yd., shng hi.Jo By 'c1trpel Lnyt>r • ~. ID--201!6 NAul Sancliunrrl is,. u Ii n el11.ue11. f'ounru!n V11ll1·y Recreation. S 3:;. Ph. 962-242t/$4.5-2626 alt, 5: JO pm. Distributed-by----·nogrr Welsh &l6-66fiG. Ken Crnrt Products I fl COLUMBIA 26-CREVIER.MOT-ORS • Free to You JS Mork II ·968-7397 Deluxe. 208 W. Jst St., Santa Ana · · I ~cc-=-= 835-3171 3 Linwt, 2 Times, $2.00 Kitt> e S500 e Good Cond. PACE-ARROW , , CHINOOK 333 Grand CanaJ, B.l. All t b d Di t f•'rrc to good hon1e, wh ite kil· tl•n, fen1ule, very lovable. 8 \11ks old. 646-2169. J[B Cat~ 852 673-7357 op ran s • , iscoun prlce • , IMt.1EOJATI: DE- 20' Sloop fbrgls , tab. head. 3 LrVERY , , ;i;ro"t,:;,~; ' !Ir m''; BEACH CITY DODGE Boats, Slip1/0ock1 910 \Vl\NTED Mooring on Balboa Island for small boat. 673--1200. CllOICE slips in new Marina for 30-70 11. hoats. 16555 Beach Boulevard lluntington Beach f TI 4.) S.1{}. 2660 NEW Jt1):ury 27' Winnebago. Air cond. sla>p1 6. S270 wk plus 8c a mile. 8J3-.8070 STAI\fJ-:SE Seatpolnt SIO. 1'8. Ca.U alter 646-2781. kil!l'rt! 673-6606. ---'==---Trailers, Travel 945 2 pm. l..imlt 20', scl'Ol!it lrom e ARISTOCRATS BAUER BUICK 2925 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa 979.2500 JM PORTS WANTED Orange Counties TOP J BUYER BILL MAXEY TOYOTA 18881 Beach Blvd. H. Beach. ~ 847-8555 NEEDED: 1956 up-Cht:v. !Ji Ton P .U. truck. Body only or comrile!e V6, small bed. Reasonable 616-6188 a lt 6Pl\1 . \VILL Buy ;your car paid for or not. Call Ralph Gordon 673-0900-445 E. Coast Hwy. Newport Beach. Autos, Imported 970 '69 ·FIAT 8j() SpidC'r: xlnt cond. red, ski r a c k , AM/Ffl.1. $900/bst olr. 968-7103 JAGUAR XJ6 JAGUAR '71, mint c:ond. 16,000 miles. White ll'/blk lea ther int. All extras. Po1•:er. air cond. AM/n.t. S7&JOJ67:>-2625. '53 XKI20 Oa~sic. Fixed h!'ad coupe. 1i.Jns very good. $875. Phone 531-5033 or 893--Z>H. '69 XKE Coupe. Air, 4 spd, 'vires. mint cond. $3,850. 496-1408. F'OR Sale • Brand nrw (j'R" Glass Sliding U o or, Complcle kl! $75, 492-Hl'12. Dogt 854 Newport J.~land, it.75 per ft. 675--5556; 213:693--5191 e NEWPORTS e AUTI>MATEs ALFA ROMEO MAZDA Aloo, ••ve1'at ull'd 1395 & up ------- 1 ________ _ '67 XKE Roadster-Lo mi 4 sp, air. ?.lake oUcr. 646-5864 Miscellaneous Wantad 820 *Wanted-Dead* Aluminum cnn.~ lhat hnve ,Mervrd you \\'1'll & provl1!1'd hour11 of plrniiurr, HUN!!! Do no wnlk, to 1000 Glrn11. llyre St., Laguna BrnC'h, No s:lnu \vhalsocvcr, accf'plc<I. Plll!nos/Organs 826 * C!eorance Salt* Of over 11tol:'kNI 11·11ilr In~. e ORGANS e Orron Ctuircl Lo11•rry I Jotl1!ny Baldy,•in ill."< lh1111n1nnd t-.IJ $1 ·1!1 s 1~r~ s:1~ri S71j G ulhra11~1·rt t~n1~lr 2~1lK·du!:-111·/l ..ci;llf' $1..l!JJ ll11n1n10111t C'n11~n!l'., 2J !lt·d :1ls frnH\ $1,G!l:i e PIANOS e Cable llur1:::1 !n1v $:1!1.'i ll!lldwln n1:!11t• ~plncl $ \~1:, \\l(•hor Cousolc $7~1;, r.r:u1ds frnin Sti9fi 1'i111ball }'r, p1nv. Gr11nd l\nnk T1•rn11 - Sll.l<Y Terrier pups, 4 mnle11, 11ho!s. l\KC. Call 11!1rr <\pm. 838-1149. -German Shepherds 8-42·316'1 ----Golden Retrievers .__r_"_"_'""_t•_u_ .. _ _,JI rli J Campers, Salet Rent 920 AKC * a11<>is:; Fantastic Deal 1-il!ELTIES (minlo. Collies) REVERSE story Of "Old Al\C f'C'.":lS, Champ sired. \Von1an and the Shoe", 3 Fem, 1 male. 549-0440. more room than famlly tor AKC Sil'fy Terrier pups . CJ\1C Open Rood chasis t.lutc & frm. SJrnv quali ly. li\ountcd, s e I f contalnf'il &l·l-2~i60. $125-StfiO. $4 ,700 .FlRi'1. 213/:.97-3267 11·ttk-t'nds or can be SC<'n nl SJl.h'.Y Terrier Pups , n<lor11bli'. AKC, chan1piun 17875 llcnch Blvd., tlwit. 11t~'ll ily, 7 11-·ks. 847.J4!t'i. Bch., \\'N'k days. ii • ArGTIAN Pups, ch11n1· '65 .l"UHD ~T CamP£1r :-;prcinl, lo nti's. 10' Cnl>0vcr pion sirNI. & t.1 i n • Schnnu~f'r pups. 64.;.....1209. C11n1per, 1'f'rrig, hearer & ]1t'Ud. 54,'\-.'ll(.Q.4, 1.A!lH.AOOH Re t r e iv er, '65 ~·ord 2"..iO ~. T. Trurk Al<C. l'{'i;:is. quallty puppit>s. Call 5j7'"6219 alt 3 ptu. f.lav<! \1·/81 ~· Cahovrr \Vf'sllvay',1; Plho1~. rn1npcr unil. 1 ~peed. Ht.II Xlnt rond. 54,000 1ni. $1995. SREGOR Gern1n11 ~hepht'hl 5-18-0316. J\cnnrl has henut iful pups ~==c.,,~---­ hy Oi. Nonlic. Terrns. Cycle1, Bfkes, ~·:!7-4!1.'lt. Scooters OBF.DfF:NC~: On~s lo start \\'rd ~l.".y 21. in N.B. Irvin!' nrt·a. Oj>('n lo all clogs S 111<··~ & old<'r 5--16-4928 1970 HONDA 175 915 ·rradrs \\',.h·0111r flOR ll·: Pups. AKC reds & Slrl'CI or rrnil blk<'. Gocxl rond. \l'i!h Jo1v mill"ag('. S·IOO. C:1l! I.Inda, 5-l&--147S. '6$ Bullut'O-EI B1111<11!0 300, xlnt ('orld, nu n1olor. $625. :~IS-1610 COAST MUSIC h!ou·k~. Xhu Chnmp tint', for Nc·111~·1·1 Bh·d. ut I lurlM•r I "ho11~1:. [)1'1. $7:>. 11r :()7-5717 Co~1n 1\11•,,11 Iii~ ~·.:;,1 e 4 T iny (.'0<•kupoos. flpf'n . ..;undny 12 In ~ l'tll SIU 1·a{'h. l\·tUST St·JI-, -B-1t 1.1 \\ 1 11 612 ... 1818 "r :i:i l-3&.~ cvrs. ()r;:11so111(' !'piru•t 01).;an, l\tnplc, Sli{IO. ·l~~~11 r1Z. 856 Horses Sell 1dlt' it1•n1s 1~111·!Ci"i!J GOO D Ban•bark horS<', 1' &12-SG78 Now! 111r., ~~ lhomlH'l'd, needs 1·:.:p'd. l'id('r, $:?00. R33-3.161. '68 Triumph 500, Custon1. Nc1v cni;:ine. $750. * f,42.-8472 • '66 \'amahn Trail 55cc. Xln'l rond. $100 540·2562 f/ORSHAM TR.All.ER SALES Alfa Romeo 2709 W. 17th Street ROTARY'S Santa Ana (TI 4.l 5.11 -2595 Immediate Oellvery '68 Shasta 13' SIC. ff UNTJNGTQN BEACH Wale<, lighb, lol~l. $795. 548--9854 ALl-l'OA -]j' trailer, used less than 6,000 mi, $895. 968-3257 Citation-Lu:<, model. 21'. 3 pc. bathroom, dual \\·heels, 3 yrs old. 536-7166. NOW ON DISPLAY Sale1 Service Parts Body Shop COAST IMPORTS lOC0.1200 \V. Coast H,vy. Newport Beach "2--0406 '69 Alfa Berlina Radio, S Spd, CZKL633J. This is a gem. $1690 COAST IMPORTS CooclyeAr Blems, Rll siz€':i, Jo1v prices. U,S. Jndy mags, Cral!l'T American from $15.95, Ilijackers $34.50 pr. 14'' lncly mags for Pinto & Vega, S.S. 4 spoke -Pinlo & Vega off road tires + \\.'heels. All brands from $22.50. 1950 Newport, Cosio l\lcsa. 645-3.554. 1000-1200 W. Pacific Cst. I-fwy. Newport Beach (n4J 642-0406 546:4529 19591 -o==~~~=~~ AUSTIN AMERICA Cadillac Parts Transmission Radio Air Conditioning Unit 1212 So. Ro~s SI. Santa Ana 542-3121) .... --... General 9~0 NOTICE, 11rc you havinr: <'redit problems for lack of '68 Austin America rndials. Xlnt cond: Call 968--3743. BMW IMMEDIATE DELIVERY c rt' d i I , r e poss::o~sionr, SF.E I IS , .. :tJ'l' auto, S.l!l5. divorce's? I cnn get you Ov.·rse11s Oaliverv finnn~{'d on a used car. CREVIER MOTORS Sonic> s:iy lht'y can, but \\'e 21,11? \\'. It : .nl.11 A.ua do. C:ilt 9 to 9. 7 days a 835-3171 11·~·ck. Dl•:lll'r. 833-3359. ---:cc.~~,- • l·:IN1l<ic '""'""'; ""' '70 BMW 2800 t-ornt S.150. cash. 54S4Si7 Sedan Costa rilesa. Pov.-er StN!r\ng, pow tr Dunt Buggies f56 Brakes. Air Conditioning, h1 I ~: JI • .. ... 17331 BEACH BLVD! HUNTINGTON BEACH . ' , • 1"' •c ~.,.,,~ 01 w~'""' ~. ,j P';,o, • 842•6666 ' ., MERCEDES BENZ SO USED MERCEDES ON DISPLAY NOW '67 Mercedes 250S 4 dr. VVB657 ............. $2,945 'liS Mercedes 220 se!d FXC873 ....... : .... •: ........ $1,575 '70 Merced~ 300 S.E.L. Luxury sed. Lease New Mercedes $118 Mo. HOUSE I OF I IMPORTS 6862 J\1a.nehesteh, Buena Pk 523-7250 on Santa Ana Fr.vy. · Orati9e ·County's ... 'd Largest S.ele~J!o'.n/~A New & Us·e~d \~-:"' - ' y Mercedes Benz _ J ~im 51.?mons Imps: ·. w~iner &'·Main St.·.: Saiita ))._~.--· ~46-4il4 -1968 2SoSL Wh!te--rcd int, Low miles. 2 lops-Real beauty-prl/pty. $5500. Day 547-:&2/Eve R46-2439. 'Sl.J\Ia CJ~jc -liOS Cabrio- let conv. Complet('l)' re- stored. $3950. 549-2526. MGB '67 MGB-GT · --.--::: L('i~urP \rOi·lrf:."peti:il 0/QC-- -'70 Porsche 911T * 'W V\Y ~cs -l'11l.t'iiig. · <\'15 1. T:ikL• 1·leau <'<1r or ? . panc•k'll l.iflO en i..: 1 nc. Stereo, Mags, Private Party, ·-~n,.., 't otr,, .. cc7_-SJ?7 5·16·S7:ffi ;dt 1(1 um 4114·&11 1. Days 839-9560, aft S -.:''"'-'""'s ..... ;,i;,i • • • 833-3155, 1!1Gd BuS: 1600 c n ~inc . FOR D '60 PORSCHE 1600--S, cond, 40,000 miles on SlOOJ. 594--3041, Ron. m1:1! ·rop Shape! Slli5 --------- Call 675.5116 '71 Ford Pinto ('Jl~. ;~=,,.:::::c:_:_:c:.:.,.== '71 ·vw SUpt'r-bU(!'. A.\l/Dl, I Sp<.1, ('u~IOlll llt'ror. Group s!erro multi-pll'x, rad.Ju. :lOOO en~. •St..·r. lf'~G·to~. $L650: 8%-12'2: $ l 590 VO LV O COAST RENAULT Renault Sa le$ & Service fo r over a decade in Oran~c County Si'rv. Dcpl. Open ti! 8 p.n1. t.Ionday 1972 VOLVO Lease Today at Best Rates Jim Sli'inons Henault 2201 So. ~lain, Santa Ana 1 blk. 1101ih of \Varner $88.74 Per Mo . IMPOR TS Service Department 51&-<1114. O.~.C. A!l1/Fl\1, Auto. trans., 1000-1200 \\'. P01clri... Csl. Ih1'Y. Sales Deparlmenl 5..i7-524.2 disc brakes. 36 mo. Nc11pol'I lll':ich (71•1) 6·12-0·100 ' For Lea sing or buy ing 516-452'.l R-15 · !\ l 11 '6.~ J-"OftD {:n! XL 4 Dr. First Showing USA -· toJt. e..wt& lu·d1p .. ~IPc>rini.:. hl'akr<:, n1r. uoLuo ,,int cond. s.r•s. 96S--3os9 an Test Drive I I G: Jim Slemons Rena ult 2201 S. Main 557-5242 1966 1-tru·bor, C.'.\1. t.16-!1303 IOllTERNATIONAL SUNBEAM Autos, Used 990 ---------- --'------ 1 GI LIL Tro"l"ll1 C1IOO: \1:'· '65 SUNBEM1 Alpt' e • Ex-AMERICAN :; .<:pd, 111!1 [101\Tlnc, nu p;i1n1, s.·il.lo. ti<:;...;is10. eel Cond -Orig "ncr -• -_ 1675. 644-0052 Ask to< P•ddy American Wooters MAVERIC!( TRIUMPH .......Gremlins VHornets ,-.--------- ""'Mata dors ""'Javelins fll :\!;11TLlt·k '.!00 cc r:n~. nc- ---------"°'Ambassadors r·rnt i.:rn. \\'/ii :i!J<: /\'.\l/F~f '69 Triumph GT-6 !l uge stock of '?l's & "i2's Rnrfl~l .. JOO. ~1_1; .... ;l\it. 4 spd, Radio, lleater. J\1ust Big·B'g SavCno.s ·;o '.\!;nrr1ck. Riil, 1011· n11. see to appreciate (ZAH469). .. Xlnt cond. Sl.'J()(I, $1795 Harbor American ;,i;.;;,; COAST Home of Conve nient 1970 ~!.11'0'fh•k, H II. slick, Paymenls lo1v m1l<'i>. Cl€'an, $1150. Call 1969 Harbor Blvd. fllli-:i\97. Costa Mesa 64&-02&1 l-'-"OMccU=sT~A-N~G--IMPORTS BU!CK '67 Buick Special 1000-1200 \V. Pacific Cst. lh1'Y. Newport Bench CTI1J 642·0-IOG Station Wa gon 546-4529 fa ctory air, automatic, po\\·er * TRIUMPHS * "'"''"• • b<ak•s. ''"'"' rack, local car, one 01~·ner. 1 71 CLOSEOUT exceptionally nice (U0!16SSJ SPITF •n L'S AS J.O',,' AS •2,1!)!1 u\L ~ Teri')' Buick 5lh & \\'i"'tn1t. GT-6 SAVE $500 Huntington Beach 53()..Gjgg_ FRITZ \VARP.CN'S --- Sport Car Center1 __ c_A_D_IL_LA_c _ OP.ANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST no E. l st, s.A, 547--076-1 TOYOTA '72 TOYOTA $2029 fl YOUR ONLY FACTORY AUTHORIZED CADILLAC 4 speed trans. Dix AM radio. Heater, defrosters, tlnt4i glass. 'Vhite wall tires. DEAL~R Pop.out renr windows. Vinyl Lllrge~t af'lectinn of Cadll-. . Ines tn Orange Counly. --- Ci:AUTIFU L! t~G5 il1lJSTi\1'G 2+'.!. This C'Hl' i~ i111n1arulatr 11ill1 a nl'l\I v .s ('Jl~UI!', n~IV p:1inl job, (dnnc by :.i }"nr1! dcal- l'rl. }~ul!y t~1111prcd \1i1h 4. spef'd transmission nnd tach air co,r~ir 1n11 ... r!. rnaq 11·h('('l~. It's the l'"Pul.1r f:isrb.ick nv~~trl ;1n11 1l is iiC'au1iful. s~oo firn1 , 6"::-11 ??. '6"1 ;,;:::;_~~ [)~~ V-~. P~/a1r mnr!. 3 i:;p Rally pak • Si2.i. '.ti9-.1590 I ---::j,"12-~l'i(l.J ---1 0 !.DSMOBILE ...,.... ___ __ 'EB Cutlass Sur.reme trim. Carpels. Front Clise SaJcs·Lcasin~. Look for our bm~esKE; ~:~~ bucket ~ul~ l?~ge (<ls evrry 'YJd-2 Dr II. Top, il!i·. fuel air, sens. -• N r1,.,ay or cour JP1(·,e1a s. lo mi, (XJ P(\011. T:ike small fl l .. ~1;1ers Ci0iil 1ac do1171, \rl11 finunc(' Pvt. Pty. - eoJl t1D14 26il<f RAl!BOn Br:.;-Cnll ''';'1:ir. nn to am TOYOTA COSTA MESA 4'1:1\'1 1. 540-9100 Open Sunday ::o_,-;;,---~-----1 n Cad Counn DeVillc blu-iO Toron.'l(!o, '1ln't cond. rull C "'"9303 ,,.. , C Piil' ""UI" Lo :, VI 1966 Jlarbor, .l\T. O'f\>"-w/1l'ht \'in. top. Fullv ~'I ,,. m1 $. n. --,70 TOYOTA equipt. Pvt. pty. 540-<JG.16 :~p. ~~ ~14'..1.:.ro· em/fm . & STATION WAGON Clays, $6--2517 e\'C/\\·knds. re, • ~·~· Phone ~J.Tn '71 Dune Buggy At.1 /Frit Rndlo, 4 Spd, low mil~. t674AD\V). BeautUv.l silver finish \1•1th black interior. (~). $1499 Gra), Dd.l I 5-ID--9892 Eves New car trade in, 4 ~peed. 'il EL DORADO, \\'ht, Ian-6-12-3203. ' ' Big engine, nt'W top, tun car. Takr tradt or .maJI do\\•Q \\'ill tinant"e Pvt Pty (!H.3- ETPJ. 546-5736 R!t 10 am. _,,, T_ruck __ • _____ M:2 $46EO COAST IMPORTS COAST IMPORTS • -l!X0-1~ w. Paci.tic Cit. Hwy. '6'! CMC ljT, cabin chaw•, Newport Beach (nt ) ~ l®l2!0 W. P!tc\fic Cst Hwy. auto, du-1 11·heets. PIS. air 546-4529 Newport Beach (7J..f) W-0406 cond., 6 Aik'bCllin Rndi3..I 546-4529 tlrvs. cu~. cab $2'200 \V 19• Vlslt our new home! lnsl. van body $2100 . 0 &12.-9006 alter 6 pm. NYLON ana.p oo camper top for Datsun P/U. Plus 11U1111<r rac1< S1S:J122. ROY CARVER, Inc. DtJlt Pilot Want Ada baV< 214 E. 11111 St .:btmllll==plore=:::·~--' Cmta .M... - t • MCB '63, new palnt, teats, J'tldlals. extras. Xlnt cond. ~. fM&.Sl22. OPR radio, & healer. 'i~U. rlau fop, lthr. all extras! l;;;o-;;,-;;,--.=---- $1495 $6,9;0; 12.000 mL &45,-266!;1 '"6 OLDS F1':1, Holiday Cpe, auto tran~ .. R&H. air, extra S."t. An. Toyo'. '69 Coupe deVUle. brown. ..L 1 1--,..,arp, • i:>. Pvt po.rty. Service dept. open 7:30 am Original owner. Excel cond. Dn,ys 673-8655, eve•. 'tU 9 pm li1onda,y thru Fri· S2,995. 64(;..S53;::· eel:____ 6+1--5.JS.i da)1 '62 CAD FUXTIVOOD PHON.E 540-2512 Runs good, all "'""'· 1200. (11 \V. warner. Santa Ana 675-ioi39 C ARO '68 CTO Big ~"'· vlnyl .... . • AM top, l"tory Air, IAotory ...f,U\S '70 CAMARO "''• wb,.ls !with lock•! -' 3i,OOO milMi, lilax-X, tlf'l'I. Ill•''" 350 VS, 4 $peed, radio, hc"tC'r, &:iuliful rond, $1500 or bnf Toyota A Jquar Dcaltt vieyl root bucket sc:,ts Ital· offer. 82$-1256. Authortred Sales It Service AVB), $2Z6. Tommy A)~ 'jg FIRESJRD Eaprlt, like 900 s. Cout HJaJnray Oievrolet, 9-tG S. Coast new, $3000. Lqvna Beodt 5jf),')100 Hwy:, Laguna B ea c h • 502-a;!tg WO 'l'O)totA Mark tt ltatkln C9'-7i44/546.9lli?. The tutest dra"' 111 tilt wqon. Al.Ito .....,.,. lit A good want ad II a aood \\'est. • _. Daily p I~ 8 ....i:. n.!f(j(). -"'-....... ' Cual1led Ad: -I -PONTIAC ) 17 17 -. . .. -....... __ -----------• San Cle1nenie VO[ 65, NO. 143, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, MAY 22, 1972 • . ' • • '"oo-C Totlay's Flaal N.Y. Stoek.s TEN CENTS Ha1id-11iade Platie ,_.1 Speaking Dana Point Man • Killed Ill Crash A Dana Point man and his flying com- panion \\'ere killed Sunday when their ex- perimental, hand-built biplane lost power and crashed into the desert west of Vic· torville. San Bernardino County s h e r i r r I $ deputies said Floyd Eugene Robinette, 36, of 25222 Brigantine Drive, Dana Point, and James Herbert Richter, 46, of Pomona, were pronounced dead at the scene at the 9 a.m. crash at the west end of El Mirage Dry Lake. · Mr. Robinette wa s employed as an engineer with TRW Systems, Inc., and was a qualified commercial pilot. He is survived bv his wife, Reba, and two children. Fiineral arrangements are pen· ding at Sheffer 1'.1ortuary in San Clemente. Sheriff's deputies said the two men had taken off in the open-cockpit aircraft and Promotion Puts End to Plans For Marine Lab The promotion of . San Cle~ente .High School Science Cha1nnan Phil Grignon r.'as created a side eUect in San Clemente City Hall. . . Because the outspoken science 1n-- structor soon will assume an ad- ministrative role at Dana Hills High School, plans for a student marine laboratory at the end or the San Clemente pier have been scuttled. Sporadic planning for the facility has taken place for about two years with lit- tle success. And this week City l\.fanager Kenneth Carr said that the project now has been abandoned in San Clemente. but might tak e place at Dana Harbor, instead. Don Hansen, operator of Dana Wharf Sportfishing , said Wednesday that he plans to donate space for the project at the sportfishing offices at the harbo~. The original plan called for selection of a spot on the pier -either an existing building or a lower-level platform -f~r sophisticated equipment and aquaria to conduct various experiments. The lower-level ramp idea fell through, however, because of the chances of loss during high tides and heavy swells. The upper-level plan bogged down as well because of the lack of suitable space on the Pier. Carr conceded Wednesday that no prog- ress had been logged since Grignon ai>" proached the council last year with the apparentl y insoluble space problem. Bonita Canyon Ball Carnival Receives Okay The South Coast Coast Area Boy's Club has Jost again in it! bid to use Old Plaza Park in San Clemente as the site for an aMual fund-raiSlhg carnival. But despitl!: that failure, a suitable replacement has been found. were testing it to obtain Federal Aviation Administration clearance to operate it from commercial air fields . Several hundred spectators watched the airplane lose power at about 60 feet ·and plunge strai gh t into the desert. The men were attending a flying meet of the Independent Protective Order o f Talldraggers when the crash occurred. The flying essociaUon is made up of owners. of..tb6-olde,..type-aif.planes with•·- strut rather than a wheel as a tall Ian .. .• ding gear, . 'Dismissal' Sparks Angry Capo Action A gruup of south C.Oast citizens engry at the asserted .. summary dismissal"· of a key administrator in the Capi!trana Unified School District today Issued a de- mand for public eumination of tbe mat· ter before school tr'Ustetl. The group, represented by Mr. and Mrs. William L. Robertson, 122 Aven ida Pelayo, San Clemente, asserts that Charles Johanruen, coordinator of the Capistrano Unified School District's special education programs, was fired without "just cause shown to the public." To press their point, members of the group plan to confront trustees on the personnel matter at a meeUng June 5. Robertson , in a letter sent to trustees over the weekend, explained that a group or citizens including parents, teachers: and interested professionals in the area "have endeavored, in private meetings and with letters to gain the facts in this case." "But attempts to do so have failed. These people have worked closely with Mr. Johannsen and know that the success of special education in this district is due almost exclusively to his efforts," Robertson added. "It is not in the American tradition to reward such achievements w i t h dismissal." Johnannsen's job status became ap- parent earlier this spring when trustees deliberated over the list o f ad- ministrators whose contracts were to be renewed next year. Johannsen's name was absent from the list of contract renewals. The citizens insist that the public has a right to know the fact! in the ad- ministrator's case, • 'because ad· ministrators are public servants with a direct responsibility to the community." The letter insists that discussion or the Issue be labeled as a "priority item" on the board's June 5 agenda and that discussion take place within the fir st hours of the meeting, which starts at 7:30 p.m. Quake Rocks Manila MANILA (AP) -A• earthquake strong enough to sway buildings and send ~ pie running into the streets rocked Manila today. The weather bureau said the quake registered an intensity of six on the Rossl-Forei scale of nine. • PRISIDENT NIXON AND ~Ovt!T PRIS IDENT PODGORNY (LIPTI IN MOSCOW Lighl Momeni Sha....r Alto; l'resldonl'1 Arrival at Vnukovo II Airport Soviet Leaders, Band Greet Nixon in Moscow MOSCOW (UPI) -President Nixon ar- rived in Moscow today for the start of in- tensive week-tong summit talks with Soviet leaders on arms control. space, trade and possibly Vietnam and the Mid- dle East. American and Soviet flags flapped under a gray sky and Moscow's warmest day of the year -81 degrees -as Nixon descended from his presidential jet, The Spirit of '76, at MOBCow's Vnukovo 11 airport. He was greeted by band music and military honor guards that marked the first vlsit in peacetime by an American chief ei:eaJtive to Russia. Heading the welcoming party of 300 were Soviet President Nikolai V. Podgorny, Premier Alexei N. Kosygin and Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko. The Communist Party ! e c r e t a r y general Leookl I. Brezhnev was not at planeside. This was described simply as a matter of protocol. The President and his party rode by limousine through 17 miles of bunting- decorated streets to the Kremlin fortress in the heart of Moscow. Nixon sa1d before leaving Salzburg. Austria, where he made a 36-hour rest stop in a fairyland castle atmosphere, that be expected the summit talk!: to be "the most intensive . • • I have ever participated in on substantive matters." But there were indications the talks might not produce the immediate accord on arms confrOllhat hadlieen expected. The ride to the Kremlin from the airport took about 20 minutes. Newsmen in the motorcade estimated the crowd along the route as 100,000 - far fewer than crowdJ who noisily greeted such past visitors as Fidel Castro and Charles deGaulle. Closer to the heart of Moscow, the sidewalk crowds were three or four Persons deep. They appeared friendly but were silent. · At the palace where he is staying in Moscow, Nixon accepted a small glass of cognac along with other American leaders as their Russian hosts toasted Nixon's health. The Nixon arrival was seen live on both American and Soviet television. The Ameican television networks picked up the Russia n TV pictures and interposed their own commentaries. Tas,,, the official Soviet news agency, also gave unusually fast treatment to the arrival. Tass commented, "It is diff icult to overestimate the significance of this visit." Moscow television devoted 25 minutes to the Ii 1e arrival ceremonies. There were a few si"niles but no tradi- tional bearhugs of greeting for Nixorl Crom Kremlin leaders. Kosygin. hardly a smiler at the best of times, offered his hand to Nixon. Mrs. Nixon took into both aims a bouquet of red flowers. Diplomats noted the absence at the airport of Brezhnev, the leader jud~ed more equal than his equals on the Soviet Union's 15-man ruling Polltburo. He had generally been expected to be present. About 200 Ru ssian workers, bused to the airport, dutifully waved U.S. flags but (Set NIXON, Page l) ~~~~~~~~~~~ Tract Approved . Near Clemente Shopping Plaza A 21·acre parcel surrounding Grant 's Plaza Shopping Center has a new San Clemente city wne and is well on the way to becoming the site of a major con· dominlum development this week. City councilmen, ending many months of deliberation and technlcallt.ies, pa!lsed a zone change Wednesday with little com- ment on the µroperty owned by E. W. Rathbun of San Leandro. The next step in the procedure will be the owner and developer's submission of applications for the project itself which will be the subject of public hearings before both the planning commission and city council, The project, Rathbun has told the coun- cil, wlll be built by the McKeon Construc- tion Company of San Diego and will in-- volve a planned community with con- dominium homes, recreation features and other advantages. The new zoning granted by the council Includes R-3-G (Garden Apartmenfla.nd R+2 2,500 (duple1) land uses. The land recently became part or . the city after annexation proceedings and In- cluded in the shift of boundaries were about six other acres of land under various ownerships. According to the rules, all annexed land enters the city with no zoning al all. And although Rathbun's land now has zoning, tlle other alx acres do not. Thus, councilmen Wednesday agreed to l111truct tbe planning-commtsslon to ln· stitute studies on possible zoning on the other parcels along Camino de Estrella . Commissioners wlll begin on the proj- ect next week. City Councilmen Wedn~sday . loo~ed at past policy on the carruval site m the past two years for the use of the city park. then agreed that Bonita Can yon might be a better place. lf the ca nyon ball park area Ls not being used on the weekend of June 15, 16 and 17, then the carnival will be held Hinshaw Blasts Schmitz Angola Airpla1ie Crasli Kills 20 there. · The canyon also contains the club facilities and group 1pokesman Ed Kil')o cald and councilmen agreed I.hat the location might serve to better etpose the youth'i>rienled club. Bus Strike Looming SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -A federal mediator say• economic I.mies w~e a "real &tumbling block" in weekend neioUations between the Greyb:>und Bus Company and its UOI> drtvm In tlgbl western st.otts. 'l1le A m a I g a m 1 te d Transit Union, noplts<nting the drtven, h&t thmtened ID atrllte lhe bus COCDIJlll1 = uni e11 I eettlanent ~.•• 39tli Disrtict Candi.dare Cites GOP 'Abandonment' By PAMELA HAUAN Of .... Dlllf ,. .... ,.,, Andrew J. lllnshaw, a candidate for the 39lh Corlgresslonal Dls1tlct seat held by Rep. John Schmitz (R-Tustln), today charged his opponcnl with abandoning the Republican Party and President Nix· on as well. Addressing a group of students al ldissioo Viejo lllah School this morning, Hinshaw, "->bent Oran(e County tu ,,.....,,., quesUooecf his ._,.,,1•1 ;.,. ltpity llld ability to reprueot lhe dtmm la his dl&rld. "kJy •llcltd alflclal should bava ......,, lnlegrt\y and aboold llY what ... means, daptte the pollt1~11 ...,. sequences, without double-talk," Hinshaw Mid. "He should know the bills 1!fe<ling his district and represent the. views of his constltutnts despite his oi,m personal views," Hinshaw cooUnued. "He claims ID be a Republican, yet he has abandoned the Republican party," Hlnsbaw werted. He clUd Sclmla' •oting record which ho said ahowed him •oting agalnll the Republican Party llld Pr.,id<nt NixDn 51 pu"""1 of Ille llma; against 1et>eral Republican prlnciJlln CO pelUl!l of the time nd aplnsl Prsldmt NWia 115 per· c:mt "' the Umt. ( ''You cannot have a .'II"" in pollUcs who comiattntJy votes egainst his pany," Hlnshaw llid. ''He likes to proc1aim himself a strong defender of lbt mllltary. 111.at,s fine, but does he vote that way? .•• No." Hinshaw 11ld that on April 25, a bill came up for a vote which would Increase pay ror military men and increase retire- ment benefits for military penonnel. Hinshaw Wd Schmitz cast a no vote on that measutt. He abo cl1'd Scbmil1' claim of being stroogly against d"'I a-. set Hinshaw cialmtd Sdlmlta 1111 one cl two reprnenta~ves to vote against a bill "bich ...Wd lntttaae mooey for in- ( ~ JDNllAW, Paie II LOBITO, Angola (UPI) -Twenty perllOnS were kBled whe.n the pilot of an Angola Alrllnts twl~ngine turboprop airliner ovtrshoti the runway at LOblto airport In dtnse fog and crashed Into the sea, the afrllne· announctd. 'l1le f2'I Friendship plane, corrying 19 pauengera ~nd foar crewmen -all Portuguese -was on a scheduled morn- ing filthl Sunday from Luanda to Sa Da Band<lra i1J South Angola with ill first stop in Loblto when the crash occured, Jhe PorlUgutse lltWI agency AN1 WCI. Algeria Has VisitOT ALGIERS, Algma (AP) -Pmkl<nt Habib "°"'lUlba ol 1'mlsta armecf here today for a .,..k's allldal visit In Anaheim To Officers Gov . Ronald Reagnn, speaking be!ore a Peace Officers Association meetia& In Anaheim this morning, criticized the state Supreme Court for banning the death pena lty. While assailing the high court for outlawing the gas ctwimber as cruel 1tnd unusual punishmenl , the Govunor 81!0 urged tlle policemen from around the atate to support current leglslat\on that would make kllllng an on-duty police of· fleer a first degree murdff offense. lie said hit .. had signed a petition demandJng that the death penalty Issue be su bmitted to the voters on the Novem· ber ballot. "We are told that wht'n society lakes 11 life," the Governor said, "it is 'cruel and unusual ' punlshn1ent. But lo kill and main1 and torture ure cruel 11nd unusual crimes and the victi ms of thost crimes are not guilty of .1nything. Who weeps for them ?" 'fh e 6 to t Stale Supreme 1Cou rl rul!ni:t Feb. 18 agai nst the death pennlty came "in total disregard of 200 years of legal precedent and in a reversal of lts own deci!ion on the same case four years ego," Reagan said . The bill miking killing a policemen a fir.it degree murder offense J1 now before the Assembly arter winnln& Senate •Po provaL Reqan 1 a I d tlmllnr Jegl1l1tlon lallecf ID win approval In Iha 1171 leg!.slaUve Rlllon because ol "a per• missive society." "We are told that crime Is 1pawned by poverty," the Governor 11ld. "Yet, there was far Jess crime during the great depression of the 1930'11 when the unemployment rate was five times higher than it Is today." Reagan dl11counted fi ctional violence on television as having a harmful effect on children. "Yet we are told that hard-core pornography has no harmful effect and we should allow our children to be ex- posed to the most salacious materia l smut merchants can manufacture." lie urged the pol Ice officers to write the ir assembl ym en concerning th e automatic first degree murder bill and urge ll! Jnuntdlate passage. ' Execution-type Murder Baffles County Lawmen The execution-like murder of Frank nnd Shirley Schiavone of Westminster two weeks ago continues to baffle police, who say they still have no idea who the murderer might be. "We're basically where we were when we started," said We stmlnster police Sgt. Frank Fisher today . The Schlavones were shot In the back as they returned to their home at 6202 Choctaw Orive at 2:20 .11.m. May 9. Last week police published a composite drawing or a man believed to have been wllh the Schlavones ln a bar the night they were killed. j'A Jot or people knew someone who fit that drawing," Fisher said, "but we cbecked out al l the leads and didn't get anything." Orange Weat•er More JUnshine on the agendil ror Tuesdn y with con tinued warm tcmptratures. High!: at the beaches 62 rising to 72 in the inland arta1. U>ws 48-Sl. INSIDE TOD.\ Y Th< COiia MWl Cil>i<: Play· h o u r t (Ind tht lluntinaton Beach Plavltoust both opent d their &ell.JOtt·cloiirtO J)roductlom ovtr tilt wttktn<l. Both art re· VieWf"d toda)I. Stt Enttrt4ln· ment. Page• 18·19. ~2 Ui.Jl, y PIL~ 1 ___ ,_, ___ ~---M_on_d_;q:c,_M_•..:1_2_2,.:._1_9n_ fM ajor Soviet Goals Behind Summit Eagerness ~ . ' .: ' <II By WILLIAM L. RYAN ~ A, ,,_111 c-...11•111 ? Only l'A'O weeks ago, the thances that l;the Kremlin \l'Ould countenance a sumn11t >..meetinJ? \\'ilh President Nlxon al tis tln1e d': ~·ere. in the vie\\' of 1na.ny. \\'orth Jess ~than a plugged kopek. Noy,· the sun1 mit is .about to begin on sc hedule. Why? !i; Behind the appa rent eagernes~ of c;cneral Secretary Leonid I. Brezhnev 7 and his colleaguei:: in the Soviet Com· munist party le:adership to meet thl~ wetk Y.·ith the President are a num ber of , major Soviet policy goals. • " lt had seemed on May 8 that Nixon's decl.a.ion to mine North Vietnamese ports to slow Soviet supplies would wash out Ille summit. lt didn't, Although the Russians vow to c:ontlnue supplying billions of rubles worth of hurdwarc to I ranoi, !he Vietnam situation is gett ing In the way of some major Soviet goals. The Kremlin eye has long ~n Intently fixed on Europe. Its drive for a security conference goes back many years and recentl y has had the highest priorit y, Moscow wants Europe lo agree to the idea of a "renunciation -0! force" in the .same pattern as the eWst German-SOviet trtaty Just ratl/iod In Bonn. The Ru.nians cannot hope to expel American tnnuence from Europe because it 1a to entttnched In IO many ways, but they can hope to persuade Europeans that a U.S. milllary presence is becoming ever Jess itnporlant : perhaps both the North .Atlantic Treaty Organization and the War11aw Pact could be dismantled. The Russ ians can hope that the Bonn· Mosco w treaty and the summit will mean steps toward an all-Europe security ar· rangement accepting the status quo -0n the continent. That would lessen the need for the awkward Brezhne v Doctrine ~Red Tanks Approach Hue 7tli Fleet Bombardment Halts Nor th .Vietnamese Push SAIGON (UPI) -North Vielnamese using P176 amphibious tanks swarmed across the My Chanh River defense line 22 miles north -0f Hue' today in an ap- parent effort to establish a bridgehead. Heavy fighting was reported in the area at nightfall. The North Vietnamese probing attack, the second in two days, was believed halted by intense naval bombardment from U.S. 7th Fleet ships off the coast, by Allied air strike that cost an F4 Phan· tom jet, and by Allied artillery. A South Vietnamese spokemsan in Saigon said tonight the North Vietnamese had been driven back across the river by Director's Petition Homeowners Ask Board nightfall, but reports from the area itself were unclear. U.S. advisers said they thought today's attacks were a "probe or reconnaissance in force" rather than an all-<1ut move against Hue. The North ·Vietnamese increued their pressure 12 miles weat of Hue and car- ried out sharp attacks near Kontum in the Central Highlands, at An Loe 60 miles north of Saigon, and in the Mekong Delta. South Vietnamese put Communist losses in those actions at 937 men, in· eluding 23 tanks on the Hue delense perimeter. Hanoi Radio reported more intense U.S. air strikes against North Vietnam today and said U.S. Navy planes on Sun-To Oppose Communl•ty day resumed mining of Haiphong Harbor. '(here was no confinnatlon of the reports by the. U.S. command but the , · Pentagon bas made tt clear in publie ~ A director of Ille C.plstrjllO·Highlar.clo--parc!>ased-b\>·tbe-Orenf-tlorporatio&-ol-slatJ>lllP.nls. !Lt...tbe U.S_inlent.Jo keep Homeowners Association has petitioned Newport Beach. Haiphong Harbor inoperable. .... , the San Joaquin-Elementary School The developer has asked the county The command did say it withdrew 600 : District Board -0£ Trustees to oppose a planning commission for planned com· American servicemen from Vietnam last planned community south -0£ Leisure munlty zoning lor the property. Included week, but another 400 Marine fliers World. in the plans are multiple and single fan:ii· entered the war zone. Bob Goertz, director <Jf the group ly dwelling and Ji acres of commercial The net withdrawal of 200 Americans asked the board to go on record opposing property· , . . . was the smallest since the last week of ~· the J\.1athls Ranch planned community The zone change IS still being studied January, 197!, when there were no because of the density fa ctor could prcr by0the cKin~tySstaffJ. . f u·t• I pullouts. It left U.S. troop strength in Id hool d, g ave g, an oaqum ac 11es Pan-v· t t 64 800 f Tb d , v .. e sc -0vercrow 1n . . nlng director, has predicted the pupil out· 1e nam a , as o urs ay. !.>' The/e co~d be 2,~ chil~~n ~a~ put to be "enough to fill a school" based President Nixon ordered American ~ ~~~~t ~;dar::· the ~a~0base, the on current plans. For that reason he has strength dropped to below 49,000 by June •· hoo'· d Id ca se d 0 u bl e asked that a school site be included. 30. An average of more than 2,600 U.S. ., sc ui, an ~ou u troops must be pulled out tach week to 1esstoru:," he said. t that d dr "It's not that we're against tracts, but m~ ea me. . ' d n't want them to. overburden the From Page l S1nce the command issued 11.8 wee~ly we ~ strength report, another mo Marme .. ' arn_ propefty in question ·ls 166 acret of HINSHAW airmen ~~ve been added. to the fjetnam th Glenn Malhi• ranch prOperty recently • • • rolls, m1htary so~ces said. . e One SQuth Vietnamese victory was stitutions trying to help the narcotic ad· re""rted -in Binh Dinh Province in the From Pa.gel NIXON .•• did not shout or smile. The Nixons were to be guests at a din· ner in the Grand Kremlin palace in lhe evening. The first talks between Nixon ::1nd Brezhnev were planned at 1 a.m. PDT Tuesday. Mrs. Nixon's Tuesday schedule -:alled for a visit to a secondary school, a ride -0n the l\tost'Ow subway and a tea. Nixon came to Moscow 84 da ys after he ended the first trip to China by a U.S. President and 14 days follo'4·ing his order to blockad e by mines North Vietnam 's harbors. diet. ,.... coastal' highlands near Qui Nhon. "Schmitz should not engage in so much G<Jvernment troops there recaptured double-ta lk," he said. "Orange County is considered the most Combat Base Salem Sunday without ma- conservative of Republican areas wit h a jor -Opposition. It was the southernmost national repualion for being a bit kooky Communist position in that province but perhaps that is because of John where they control most of the northern Schmitz. portion. ''This county carried CaH(orrtia for President Nixon during the last election," he emphasized. Yet Hinshaw charged Schmitz has been supporting fellow Rep. John Ashbrook of Ohio \Vho is \\'orking to unseat President Nixon, Hinshaw said. 'The county official -told a small group of students that he has more to offer than his opponent. Hinshaw said he kno\vs the county bet· ter than any other single individual and is close to its people and its problems. Capo 's Council Sets Coastline Parley Tonight A discussion of coastal legislation will take place at tonight 's 7 -O'clock meeting of the San Juan Capistrano City Council. Despite the Ameri can·Soviet dis C(lrd over Vietnam and the l\1iddle East. the successors -0f Ivan the Terrible. Peter the Great. V.t . Lenin and Josef Stalin t'lok pains to put a happy face on l\1oscow .. Red and red·white-and-blue bunting :~ decorated the route from the airport to ' the Kremlin. \Vo men in babushka scarves scrubbed off the traffic sign s. and res idents of apartment houses along the limousine route had been ordered not to hang their "'"ash from balconies. Jn addition to Tass, Pravda . the Com· muilist Party new spaper, characteri zed the talks as nece ssary for world peace. Pravda published a three-inch picture -0f Nixon on its front page - a rare spla sh for a foreigner. Hinsha\v pledged to bring expertise in the area of financing to Congr ess. Hinshaw also pointed to the county's high, rate of unemployment and emphasized that congressmen are in a position to in· fluence the location of government con· tracts. tre said he has traveled to Washington and found that "Schmitz has no rapport with goverrunent officials," and this 'vould hurt the county's chances of receiving any government contracts. At the last meeting Charles Neal, assis· tant to state Senator Dtnrtis Carpenter (R-Newport Beach ) urged the council to take a positive stand on coastal legisla· ti on. Mayor James Thorpe has criticized Senator CarpEnter's coastline protection bill because he believes it opens the door to st.ate. rather than local control. Neal !old him the bill could still be amended. Other items for consideration on the light agenda include: OU.NOi COAST $( DAILY PILOT During a question and ansl\-·er session Hinshaw told students: -He supports Presidenl Nixon's Viet- nam policies. -He supports the \\'age and price con- trol instituted by the Nixon Administration because of inflation. -He denied that Norton Simon has contributed to hls campaign. -A proposed lease agreement on tl1e mini-park in downtown San Juan. -Agreement for engineering services for the Camino Capistrano improvement project. -Request for an additional firelvorks stand by American Legion Post 721 . -Acceptance of the completion <Jf Del Obispo Road improvement project. Court Okays Conviction In Less Than Full Vot e r ,.,,. Or111n C••I DA.ILY PILOT, wlfll Wlltcfrl 11 <omDIM<! l~t N•W1·Prni, II riubll"'ld ..... '"' O••"Qe C111t! Pvbli1f>i"f ComMnr. s..,,_. r•lt tal!'""' ••• p...bli11>td, Mond•r lf>rovt'- frld•v, IOI'" (O•lt M111, Ntwptll llt<l\o l·hmllngto.. "'''"'Fov~ttil'I V1Uty, L•o- lrttll, ln'"'°1S10dltl>Kk •M $1n Cltmtnlt/ .Stn J111n Ctpi1tr1no. A t lllfle rirglCll\&I oiiTfliir k cw~"..,_ S1!urd1v1 11111 sU11111v-.:-r,.._ l'l'lll(:llNI ll\ll>li111"'0 plf~I h ti ~JO Wt\! l ,ty -'''"'• Co1!1 Mt1f, C1lilor11i1, till .. Robttl N. Wttd Prt1>CI•"' 11111 Pvoi.1~tt J 1ck R. C11tl1r ' • • • • l ' . ' ! ~ ·, j ) , • , - \'•(.I Pftl>dffll 1110 Gfl\ftl l M.t n19r1 Tho"''' K11vil Edi IOI lhomtt A. Murpl!i "'t Mtf'lf91"9 £ol111r Clttrles H. loot Rickaril r. Nill A11lll•,,l Mtt\f91ftg EOlltf\ S. Cl......,. OMc. JOS' Nortlt El Ctmh10 Re al, ,2672 ---C.1t1 """9: UI Wt\! &1y Strttt Npport 9M<fl1 ml Ntw>1IOl'I lo.i!tvf rO H .. llftftti'I ltttflr 1ta.IS IMcll IOl.tkvt tf -t.1tVM INICft:-J:ll ll9f"tlt A-..nllt r.i.,.._ mo '4ZAJJt Ci..llW A-'4l·H 71 S.. C..._t. A• D1,•rt•lltl: T•llphHI 4fJ-44ZI t.pyrltflt, ltn, Ortntt Ctttl l'IMlllllllt <~. "° ,,... • .... i.. lllllfllf•llfl'I .. tflJetWI fNlttr or M-tl'Mll'lff'!Jt Mrtln •11r M n.rofllCtid •l"*'t .,_... ,_, """*' .. npf'f"lfflf ....... ~ ~ "'""' ..., ., c.o Mu9;, (.ii.... -..Ulllltn i.,. Ctff'IH: n,,J ~ tr -II U,IS """iti,Y1 ft\lrlttfY &fl • a • . .s ..... , .. ..,, . .. \\'i\SHINGTON (UPI) -The Supreme Court In a 5-4 vote held today that a state n1ay permit convictions in criminal cases by Jess than a unanimous vote of the 12· man juries. The decision came in cases from Louisiana and Oregon. U n a n i mo u s verdicls are. requlred in federal courts and m<JSl other states. Under Oregon'& constitution, 10 of 12 jurors may return a verdict of guilty ex· ctpt ·in murder ca9eS. The Louisiana praetlce under both law and the state constitution allows con- viction by nine of 11 jurors, except when the defendant could be sentenc~ to death in addition. Unanimity Is required in less serious cases tritd by five-man furies. Texas, Montana. Idaho and Oklahoma allow leSI than unanimous verdicts for minor offenses. In anotlttt we today, Uie <our\ uph•ld lht <onstltutlon11ity of federal and state tmmunity t1w1 used to require a wltne$1 to five tvklwce or fact Jill for con-tempt~ atllUtl AU used U •major \\'eapon in the \rar on organ ized crime. The S.2 ruling carne in test cases challenging the immunity provision of the 19i0 federal cMme control la\v and New Jersey's state statute 11long the same lines. They are used whe n a wit ness resorts to the Fifth Amendment claim that h1I testimony might incriminate him. The immunity decision dealt wilh two types of exemption from prosecution. One is known as "use" immunity. This promises that a witness will not be pros- ecuted for anything he "1!'1 In his own testimony or any evidence of a crime deriving directly from It. But Jt does not exempt him from pros- ecutlon H testimony by other witnesses or separate evidence Uno him to a crime. The olhtr, much broader type ls known to lawym u 11lranucUOMI" tmmunlly. This provtd .. be can never lie prosecuted '"'any crime Involved In hls tfJ(lmcmy, The court upheld "ust" lmmunity in to<lay's two ~ which lnsl!U on Uie rfihl to lntmeno wherever Communist ru!t ls threatened. The Soviet Unlon'a: westen1 butlers could be considered permanent and un- ch::iHengable. \Vhat else do the Russians v.·ant from the sun1mit? They want expanded economic and trade ties with the West and the United States and access to Western tec hnolo gy for application to the Soviet consumer t conomy. The Soviet system is more than 50 years old now and its domestic economy still suffers from comparison with Western standanfs. The Politburo Jong has been fetling the pr'ssure -0f popular impatience. The So\'iet economy could make ef· fective use of some of the e!l()rmous in- vestment in superweapons and defense. Some sort of agreement on llmitation or missiles \vould be attractive to Brezhnev, as it would to Nixon. There has been some expectation that a beginning, at least, emanating from the strategic arm limitation talks may be ready to memorialize this summit. China figures largely in Soviet reason· ing on the need for this summit, and not UP I Tl .. Phtl• Another Nixon Tt·avels Richard Nixon, nephew of the President meets Liberian youngsters during visit to Firestone rubber plantation in Rarbel, Liberia. Young Nixon, son of Mr. and Mrs. F. Donald Nixon, 1016 \Vestwind Wa y, Newport Beach, currently is a student on tour with Chapman Col· lege's World Campus Afloat. K"leindienst Foresees Organized Crime's End Crediting electronic s u r v e i 11 a n c e techniques as the answer, Acting U.S. At- torney General Richard Kleind~nst today predicted that America will cripple and totslly control organized crime within three to four years. He did not mention any specific ethnic groups or individuals, but left little doubt in his references during the California Peace Offi cers' Association convention speech at the Disne yland Hotel. "A handful of callous, evil, avaricious men who think nothing of murder , ex- tortion, and perjury have become a grO\\'- ing malignancy in American society," he de clared. "But measures pressed by this Administration among which electronic surveillance figures prominenlly have put 1,600 of these top crime figures -0ut of business," Kleindienst charged. "\Ve have eliminated half <Jf the leadership of 'the families' and it is my prediction that in three to four years we v.•ill have this cancer completely under our control," he added. Kleindienst said he differed with Governor Reagan's earlier appeal for the restoration of the death penalty "in the sense that I believe we can onl,2 have limited capital punishment whether it be in California or anywhere else. "By that I mean the death penalty for political assassination, the killing of an on duty police officer and the majorlty of premeditated murder ,'' Kleindienst said. "I don't believe and I never have that \\'e can include crimes of passion in the category advocated today by Gov. Reagan," the acting fede ral attorney general said. Kleindienst predicted the de c I In e """•ithin a very few years" of the drug pl'oblems ''that have achieved such tremendous proportions in our society to- day . "It is my belief that the Vietnam War which has so distressed the youth of our nation has been a prime factor in so many young people turning to drugs as an escape ," Kleindienst said. He blamed "a nation that sent 500,000 young men who were never told why lhey were there 8,000 miles to fight a war while the people at home were told that that war didn't exist." only because , ?tfoscow mJght want to balance the Nixon visit to Peklng. Sov iet fear tlf China is real. So1n e In· :;pired leaks Jn Moscn1v t!1csc. d~ys suggest that the Nixon n1ovrs _in V1l'Ln.1_1n \\'iii force c:lusl·r f{('d t:h1nese-Sov11~t cooperation. But !here ho~ be('~J no s1 ~11 thai the basic ~tus(·o1v-Pck1ns tlirferc!lccs were being patched up. . , The Soviet Union sti ll has H m1lllo n troops on the long Chinese border. A quiet F:urope \VOuld permit Brezhne.v and his colleagues to pay closer ::ittenhon I() Asia and the contest \vit h China, without too much sacrifice to the Soviet domes\Jc economy • Son Tic l\:led, A11d Wallace Toes Wiggle SILVER SPRING , Md. (UPI) -Doc· tors reported today that George C. Wallace's toes have sho\vn involuntary activity and an aide said that \Vallace's son tickled his father's feet "and his toes moved." The doctors said the development was ''most encouraging." But they said it \\·as sti ll dlfricult lo as certain \~·hcther \Va llace "'ill recover from the paralys is inflicted by a \Vould·be assAssin's bullets last Monday aft ernoon. "Over the past 18 hours there has been some return of involuntary muscular ac- tivity to the toes of both f~t ." said a medical bulletin Crom doctors at Holy Cross Hospital. "Gov. Wallace exhibits normal reflex reaction when the sole of his foot is stimulated," the bulletin said , "There is also encouraging evidence ot Increasing sensations down to the level of the mid-thigh. The significance of these finding as regards .to the final.degree o( recovery from his paralysis is difficult to ascertain at this time but is most en- couraging." Elvin Stanton, assistant press secretary to the \VOunded Alabama go\'ernor, said \Va\lace·!' son. GC'Orge Jr .. 20, \"isited his fat her Sunday night and burst into \Vallace's staff room !lfter the visit , shoutin~: "I tickled his foot and his toes moved. Then I held up shee t so he could see it.'' Stanton said the younger Wallace in· di cated the governor \Vas pleased with the new development. Billy Joe Camp, Wallace's press secretary • ...issued a statement from Cornelia Wallace, the governor's wife. "I'm not surprised,'' she said of the new devtlopment. "I was most optimistic all along and I thank the people of this country for their prayers and I hope they will continue to pray for my husband.'' Duo Net $2,000 In Pre-dawn Viejo Stickup A manhunt continues toda y for a pair of bandits who confronted a ~1ission Viejo restaurant manager at gunpoint Saturday and took $2,000 fr om the safe. Steve Powers, 23. of l!unlington Beach. said the pair blindfolded him with tape and forced him back into the Jolly Ox- after surprising him as he locked the restaurant's doors. Powers was closing up the nightclub at La Paz and Cabot roads during predawn hours when one of the gunmen confronted him, sheriff's deputies said. The victim said he was herded across the parking lot to a second armed bandit before both pushed him back into the Jolly Ox to get the evening's cash receipts . Stumbling in \.\'i th his eyes taped, Powers sai d he could only describe the (irst bandit as being a thin man, adding that both spoke in a midwestern twang. Beautiful Diamonil Rings at Big Savings lllt-lalf Jtw.irv Prl<t 1.AtUIS $225 WIOOIN• ANO a M•A•aMaKT ltN• 111' Btl"Ollil\lf 1l)'le • 1/S ct. •1trl'Nnf -Ml In rtllow tiold. LA.OtlS $185 Wf;OOINO A.MO INOAOlMIMT llllN• SIT 11$ ct. dl.tm!IF\O • lfl Wflllt OQMI, LAOtlS $165 WIOOIN• AHO IH•A•IMIMT llNO SIT C~ftr lllttnor'id tllf",_.,,. "1 J -II dlemaidt fD"I 1/1 c . S.t "' Mtlf9 ...... LAOIS:S $155 WIOOHfe ANO INOAOllMIKT •tNI SST Ct111'r •ltmortPI • lltafnlofld ~ ~ lt MNI dll'""""" la!ll I'-Cl, -11'1 yttie.t OON, ou• PIUCl s110 s75 s55 sso DO M ucm OUR MOSt UNUSUAL DIAMOND GUA RANTEE uo1as $275 Sl 35 Wl.!>OINe .tJfll llt ... llMINT ltJI• Cr '' •IMMNI 111 et. W11l'I J t!Nll '""""* ttttl wt. A • When """U buy a dlo-C'I. In -'t!lt told. 1- • mond from u1 we will Choose from over 125 weddnNJ rlllCJ sets. Also large selection of h solitaires,. 9u1r1nt .. t "' di1mood at 40% MORE than you Id for It or yo ur moner tic:. Can you do •• well ol .. wt..ro? COMPARE. COSTA MESA JEWELRY & LOAN Fi•d Flrtt at UW 1'lnl Pla<c lo Shop 1838 NEWPORT-IL-YD. PHONE ~WlllO-COSTA hodw"' I ! Pi I ~ ' I \ ( -~ ---_.,..._ .... ---------• .. ( \ LEGAL NOTICE Money's Worth COMPLETE-NEW YORK STOCK LIST 'ICTIT IOUS lUSlflllll fllAM• ST•TaMINT TM follaw 119 NMOl'll •rt llol"' tv11,.., .... NIWPOltt MANACEMENT COM '""NY D2 M dltlaon Orlvt NtWllO(I l eKll Ct !ICH"n 1 Gal Employes: NIW vo.-1( IV~l).....F•llowl"" ,,, Pl'kll ,,, Ille Ntw York 510Ck Ell<.lllllllf S11tcUhdl) Hlto'I l V# L111 C1!1 AblioollL I 1a ,,,. '°" GtM11I cor-•llCIOI n.u W111 A....,_ tia(rttnanlo Ctlllrwnlt lCt llftrnlt Cor...-.fJCIOI) Sl•ff•St1 Ct to 1tl o n 1t01 We.U1t1!11111r A y . II u . WHlm\11,i1r Cal lo n 1 !C1I f0tn 1 Corpor11 onl Tll 1 boii 1141l 11 tCllCIUC:ltd bY I Uml!ICI P• lnersll 1 Mytl1s, Realities A(l'lrw:I 2 -'O Acrn1Ct~ M "un•.t.u. 21 ... d E~P l td All M!I i )(I ACl<l•l it H Adm .. ! C1> A11""11LI I 61 lllY Sll!ltll:.11.-.SEA COltPORATION OutYllf O Ctirlsl111U1n Pre1ldtnt T11l1 111terntnt w11 "It'd wll~ !~t CDl.ln fy C+t•k 01 Or1llt t COVlllY c~ AP• 21 lt12 S I rk D1vl1 Alttf'-.y ti LIW .... Yl\hhlrt leui.v11• '-"A-let Talt!IM111 JU/ill Ull LEGAL NOTICE ,.ubll"'td 0 an~r Co11I ~'V" I I. lS t1 1t12 PU42' 01t y Pel 1n11i 1------------- ~~~~~~~~-• 141'4 LEGAL NOTICE NOTICI TO (llEOITOlllS 0, IULK TRANSPl!ll ANO NOTICE Oii H. Tt:HDIEQ TlllAN l,Ell 01" LIOUOll LICIHSI Cllt LIC•NtES HOTl(I to Clll!DITOllS NOT CE IS HEllE!Y G vErJ •a !ht S PEl'IOlt COURT OF THI! Cred !ors of Frtll J Mell de •"" 0on M STATI! 01' CALlFOllNIA l"Ofl SI uerna 1 SD( al S.curllv Ho Ss.;..(Q.1 .. 1 THC COUNTY OF DAAfl~I •1'111 J.il ... n 91»$ ·~l>KI vt ~ T 1n1terCH" N• A-11U• •nll LIC!f\ste wlloH buSlntn .ckl••SS II Ellt tr 01 OAV 0 CANEDY GIL.MA» 250 E11it 11111 S lf<lt tn 1111 C IV ol Coill Oec:c1•td NOT ICE S HERE!Y GIVE N to Ill& M111 Counl~ of Ortntlf $ t t al c KfltD•I cl !ht 6bovt namtd dtttd&nl Ca lorn A h 1 bulk I 1nl tr h •boul Iha! 1 1 Pt 1on, 111v1nu c a ms 191 n~• 1~, to t>. mede lo Slepllrn R S mmons ind 111d dtCtdt'ftl 1rt 11<1111 fd ID I f tlltm '°lnlty Haney S mmom Soc: II SKur IV wltn 1111 11ec1u1 v ~ovche s In Ille c!fl(t llto 547 n &SU and SJl•-J2st. rtu•K or 1111 c • k cl !ht atlOvt i nt 11.0 ceurt .,, ' vt Y T t osiu-.. t nll I n 1 1 n d 1 d to " ttt nt tlltm w 111 11'\e nK•st•'Y Transl• " w11o .. but Mii add 111 It ~ou<lllrt 10 11'11 vndtn ltntd 11 220 Park 10l20 A11)\1 ~ In the City of Stinton C1>11n Avtrnit Lt9un1 ti~•(" C• uorn 1 t2•l1 IV ol 0 ante -Sltlt of C• lforn 1 to6IO wt'l l<h Is l~I '11(1 111 bu1lnt1t ol IM Tiit Procitrtv t dllC-l'ibed n 'ttnlrll t i .....aert 9nto1,1 n 1 I m11 ''• 1>1r1a n nf 111 AH stixk In I edr flxturff .,qu pmant Ind the 11111• of tlfd Otctd1nt wl1hJn f11u t oad Wiii 111 I c'lirlaln blltlnttl known as month1 aUt< Ult llrtl p\lbllc1t11111 el 1hls HI I tn S<au•rt LIClllDl"I 1nd oc.1141 ti 150 notice East 11th StrHI In 1111 C ty at Cosl• Ot11\\1 Mav l 1tn M111 County ol Of1n91 $tile ol MAlttA JANE GILMAN Cl lo n t and I '"sltr 1111 lot ow ne E•ec:11tr x 111 tl'le WI 1koholl( btvtrltf lk tntr 0 If St I 1 of the 1bo.,.. n111'11d decodtnl Gen. al N11mbtr JI 17060 nfJll IHI/Id ta WILLIAM M, WILCOXl!N l>l'tm s11 loca lld 11 :UO E•st 11111 llrtll 2't ,.,.., A¥..... Cost• M1i1 tor "" l>l'ln'I H1 localld II Lq11111 l"ch C:1Ufontl1 tu.sl 1SO f11t 11th Slrtfl IR 11\1! City of Corte 'tll (114) •M-7US Mtll Covn!y of Oran91 Stilt ct Allcr!llY fir EXKUI 1. C1Hlornl1 Pvbl slltd Orange Co.51 Da I~ Piiot T11a1 "" 1mount ol purcllls11 o I<• <ir M•y 1 15 n :111 1tn 1111 n con1 dt••llM n ~onrit(11on with Mid --------------·JI •n1le 1>1 'ad llttn 1 •!Id sad bvs neK LEGAL NOTICE lnc:lud n1 the 11tlm•tt<1 lnven1or V 11 lttt sum OI 113 OOC 00 wtilcll '<mJ sh of 1ht lo ow n1 Clle(kl -de~ 1111 by S mmon1 l"l(TITIDUI IUllNl'SI -lmpa 1•1 ll~n~ Anal'll m NAMI! IT A TIMI NT AC(! Ne O• Jfl.ol? 1 100000 The lo !awlr!t gerJons •f• 110 !'It Proml110ty nc ts -ncn-lnte eJ bu1 "'" 11; EXECVT VE OFFICE 5'1 Sen N co-bt1rlr19 Promt1111ry No t 111 Or N"' p0rt !tac:ll t2MO N~lb I ln eJ<:rDW ., 000 00 Mrs p1 rlcl• Je•n 11 enc: c 21.312 N~ 1 rSK~~d by Security Pa(llf 01 v1 Min on V •lo Ct lornlt • •e 1~ 000 00 M .. IC111'1 vn M•rl• Wrt111 171$1 Lt ,. F lllhtr bu1h'1e1, n•met Incl aOdrnMs Lim• FOl.lnltln Val av cir l0tn 1 u11d bY !ht T 11Uff•CH" within 1hrt1 via s Thll t>u1ll'lttt It bf Ml c.onc:tUCltd llY t la1t Mil IC llf ti iu-11 lt1 11'111 C1ntr1I l'ar1Mt'lh10 Trtn1ltrN •rt IC•tll'Yl'I M Wt ll•I ltANCHO LIQUORS 5712 W11tn1ln1kr l llls 1111-1 ftltd w th 11'1• Counf'f Avtmit Westm 111 •• Calltornl1 Cltrk o1 Orir111 CO\lflly on M•v 11 1tn Thal It h11 btln 19rttd Dt!Wi'tn u !d ll<enSH i ncl !ntel'ldtll l 1n1ltr" 11 re-&'/' 91u1r 1 J MlddOlt Del>lllV CovnlY aulrtcl bY sec flCl14 of !hi eus neit t 11d C trk , 17744 P'rol1111-Coc!t 11'111 thl tonskier1llon for 1tit tr•iuftr ol 1ti. butlMU .Ind ft1tbtllhld Otff\91 C....! 01lly p lat 1r1n,l1t al Hid ll(C"H 1 to bt pad only May 15 n ,. 1ne1 Jun1 s un 1on n 111., ,.111 lrlNlt.J hM ...... •~Olfld h' 1•111 1>11:>1r1men1 ol Al(ohO c l•v1 •tit Ll:GAL NOTICE Con1rcl ---====~~-~~--·I Tl'!~t 1 111• t '"~Ir t nCI au tnment ol ~ l'ICTITIOU( IUSINl!•I ll'!e 1tc rtt1l6 1lock In trallt fl•tur11 t<IU l>"'tnl Ind llood W DI ll d bullntH NAMI STATIMl!NT will bl mlOr lnll 11'11 (Ol'll dt ti~ Tiit ~llowlnt 1>1rtont 1r1 do 111 tM ''"' t1>11t ner w 11'1 1111 (or.-lde a Ion lloulfntft 11 for Ille 1 a11tt1r 1nd 1t1 9nmenl al !lie LA AfMVOA SAOOLERY 7315 E 1for111ld llc11111 Is to bt (Oftsumme!td on CO•tl l11hw1y Corona dtl Mtf t2•2S or •lier hen n h div 01 Jvnt n n • tllf Oan!tl Jo1tPll II> • I mt Downlnt •• , 0 d,.• lmrnl cl The !an~ ol Cr w1stniln1t1r ~ w 1 '' c 1 c ' "lldv P11 dr. Romero ntl ocwnlnt Ca ICH"n • N ., 11 ' v c en e Clr Wenm n1 ., Or .... Wtll ft !hf Cltv 0 San I AN This M 1nen , bllne co/\Clu( td by 1 Countw at Or1nt1t Sia I at C1 !a "~ Citne 11 P1rtnt 111 9 I> ovldtcl fllal Int 0.1>1rlmtnl ct A t ot\111< OANIEL J SPRATT Btvt 69• Cont ol ~ts tppravltd 11ld Thlt ttll<"mtnl II Mt w 111 lht CCVII.., t 1n!ler al 11 d I (tnte ., DI ltd Ma~ 10 ttn C trlr. of Ortntt Coom Y on M¥'t U !t7t. FllED J M(!ltlOE •v Arrhvr E Kr191r O•llUIY C°""'IV T enlf•rllf' 1no L!(tllJH Clfrll DON M S LVflllNAll P 1m' T••~•f~"' 1nd LlcensH ,-ub)l111td Or1no1 Co•ll 01Uy P Ill STE PHEN JI: S MMONS ~AY 12 2t l l'ICI JuM S 12 1•n 1l2t 1.1 Trin'flf'" 1nd 111lllldtd Tr•ntftl'ft LEGAL NOTICE NOTIC• INVITIMC l lDS PINl(V NANCY S1MM0NI Tr1nalor11 111(1 lnllflOld Tranlftrff l"ubl shed Orat111 CHll Dilly P lot M.ey 21 1t12 11J1.n f'lll!~1 II Mrtby 1lvtn 11111 1M Botrd Cll' T u1IM1 of Ille Co.11 Community Co •H LEGAL NOTICE By SYLVIA PORTER Not long ago a young ac- quaintance who works 111 a private employment service and who 1s compensated ac cor dlng to the num ber of Jobs he Is actually 1ble to fill received from nn employer a request for the fOUO\\ illg l\fe c han cal engineer s p ec1a llz1ng 1n fluid con trol devices -e g heat ex c hanges 1"011:t•• c en tr1fug11l pwnps valves fluid mixers and separ ators substantial salary for the qualified person But there was a catch The employe ha d to be a wom111 Although sure that a search would be fruitless the young man nevertheless called his f irms Chicago office W1 th1n m inutes this office produced t he names of six ellg1ble lady candidates and one \\as promptly hired for this JOb You 1e JO the majority 1f you neve r \\ould have con~idered an eng1neer1ng s pec ially 1n fluid control de~ ices a woman s JOb You are also 1n the m&Jo 1ty 1f you continue to indulge m unfair illegal Job labeling which arbtlrarlly 1n s1st3 that one occupaton 1s for men only and another for women only Aptitude tests though have r~peatedJy shown that wom en c~.rfJ\flTl-JUSt aboul an.Y- 1o b as well as men can Women are nor-i represented. 1n virtually every one of the 400-plus occupationi'! b sted 1n the 1970 census Yet 1n de flance of all equal opportunity law s JOb l abel in g persists-and 1t continues lo bar v.omen from the higher level higher paying JObs Here 1n add1hon to the ' \\omen s Jobs m yth are other myths which mock this era or equal 1ob rlghts MYTH Women are absent from their 10bs beeause of ill ness more than men are thus cost the employer m o r e m oney 0 1trtct ef 0<•1'19• Covnty C1l l111nl1 w "'l·--------------r.x1 Vt t••llCI bldi 111 lo 2 «I I 111 T..,_. l"ICTITIOUI a USINESI l----L-E_G_AL--.-.OTJ--C-E ___ _ 1111 MIY JD 1tn 11 ""' Pu ~·· "' l"I 0 .. 1 ol .. d td>Dol dl,lrltl loctled ti NAM• STATl!ME NT 13P'Q Allam1 Avl ""'e Co1t1 Mlsa Tiii IDllDW nt Pt:rSGn 1 Ooln1> bu, nt s• NOtlC• OF INTENTION TO l!NGAGE C•tlllM'~J1 11 Whkll time 11 d bids wlll be 1' MOOULECTlllC SYSTEMS 1 41 ~ IE t IN THli SALE ~lgvp:~G 1~Tr~gL~CH'L :HeT~ OR 'Walnut Fulltrlon C1 lorn 1 •• 01' ALCOHOLIC lliVl!llAGIS svr1 Stoa M1nul•<l11 Int In( 1 M•~ U 11? All btd1 I t to be In ac(ord1nc:e W th CilllCM'"ll coroortt Gr1 1411 E 111 TO WHOM T fM Y CONCEAN fht tn1trvct 1>111 1!1d Canel lklrl1 i nd wa fll.ll Fv lertlMI ca ICM"nlt Subled ta l•su•nct of the I censt I P S!lklflt1tloM wll th l•t now Oii lit• Ind Thi• buslMSI ' c:ondvctld lllY • (Of' Jllll'd IOI' 11Dtlce It MreDy fl .... n llllt lht rnty bt ll'(ured In 11'111 ofll(t Ill lht oor•lkHI unClt•sltnllll p ooa1r1 to u t 11c:Mollc ,.urt~11ll!f A1enl of U d l(haot d sir d E A !ETTIN btV ... 1011 11 the p t m lt l citlCrlbtcl 11 lac:h b!dc!tr must tvbm!I w 11'1 hi• b d 1 .,111 $1'Crt11rv 10 1ow1 c:a1llltr I tllKk (l rl I Id tMdt Of' b 0. Thi• ••• emtnl WIS l Kl .... !II '"'' Covr.. 1ns w Vldorl• St tlldt I( & L, C111!1 dtr I bolld mltdl! '1v1b • to 1111 .,,,,., o1 IY Clerk gl Or""" COi.int)! on A#rlr 21 ~!.t Ct llCM"n 1 fht C0tn Comm..,,.rlY Colll'Ot Dltlrlct lt11 Pur1111n1 1o such lnleMllOl'I lilt un ... [d ol Trw. H1 111 1n 1mcunt nol 1111 nr.oc den!Oned 1 11'ofv.,. '" ti!• OtP• tmenl NII I ve 91'("11 (l"•l ol the sum bd r.: l'll9M11 M DtP"'"I Atty ol A(at\OI( Bew'" Control lo 11~1nte I ~r111IH !hit IM b dd~r wl I tl'lltr Into ... flltrltl lll•M'll'MI llWI of 1n 1lcollol c beV1r191 I cenu lo• 111111 1111 propised Conlrlct I thl 11mt II , ......... (II i.ntla t1107 p em WI II IO low• .w••dfll to him n lhe tvtlll ol l1Uur1 lo ,11424 ON SALE BEER tnhr nt11 au(~ con1r1('1 11'11 1>rocMd1 el Pub llhld OrtMt Co11t 0 1 Iv Pllol STOCKHAM Ken11t h W !ht dlttk win bl lorft llCI CM' lti tilt use MIY I I IS 21 1t12 11U n Pvb ll'lld Or111111 CP111! DI ly Piiot of • bond Iha full sum lt\ertol w I llt M1' 22 1rn 1130-12 flll'lt tld to sald KllDDI d1str ct LEGAL NOTIC!: No btdde m1v wlllld 1w 1111 b d fOr a t<'rlOd ol fO(ly flVI ('5) d•Vt 11!1r '""' 1--------~---~~C. LEGAL NOTICE dtlt tat for ll'lt 01141" no the .al NOTICE TO Ol!CL.A.11.. CANOIOACYl--------------- Tht tlotrd of Truirtts rtsf Yfl l~e FOil SCHOO L OISTltlCT OOVlll•NlfllO l"ICTITIOUS IUS1NESS 11rl~lltH o1 ritec:llnt iny i nd t I bdl CH' IOA•O MlMllll lllLECTICIN TO II! NAME STATliMl!NT "' wil.,.. tnv lrrttv 1 1 ei or ll'I-Hl!LO IN TNI NEWPOlllT-MISA Tiit follow nt 1>1t1on 1 '1o nt buslnttl I I I UN Ll'llD SCHOCIL OIJTllllCT 11 fOml• lltt n l llY bid or n IM b Ill! !'It NOT C€ 1$ HEREllY GIVEN TO ALL INCOGNITO NO 11 301 Mtrlne No 1 OPt:n Mil' JC ltl'2 i 00 p m NOll:MAH E' WATSON QVAL F EO PERSONS that 1n e e(llon tit bOa II and tl660 seuv !o.trd ol Truiltet w t bl lied n 1111 Ntwl>Ort M11a Unf fd Sll1 on A Wllllt USO 11111 $1retl Apl Pubtl itild Ot•nv• Cotti Oallr '"lo! S(floO! 0 fl I( COUlllY of Or1n91 Stet• L 311 NtwPGrt tleed'I M•Y u t1 1'12 1,.111 of Ce !o flt en ll'lt t llhtll ll•Y al August Th 1 bus neu It t>e ne tDl'ldU<ltd by an LEGAL NOTICE l'ICTITIOUI IUllNEll NAMI ITATl!MliNT lollowlnl Hrton 1 do nt bullntst nn for the 1>Ur11D11 ol 1 «In• two 1nd v dutl m.mH s lo I ,.,. Yl(l l'ICltl In 1rv1ree 5ht Cl\ A While 1re11 Na s end No 6 on t111 eov•rn nt thl1 111 emenl I t d with 1he Covnlv bolrd af u d Khoot d 1tr1tl 1ald Clt rk at Or1nee Coun v on Apr I 21 it n mtm~rs to $f v• dur n1 !hi 1mall'lder 8y lltvtrly J M1ddCll: Oepuly Cau!'llY al 11'111 1trrn1 In wtiLth ll'lt v1c1ntlt1 h1vt Cltr- OC(Ufrtd ,., .. FormJ for decl11 nt ctndld1cv •nd lor WATSON L NE 0 IVE. s IF IE 0 IM nomlnallon or (l n\lldlltl ICM' !ht t ie<: 1"17'22 Pub Isl\~ 0 1n9e Cotti OlllY P lot May I I 15 22 1911 1111 n SERVICES UNL M TEO llO PrOIJltCI t Cl\ 1 1 avt lab e lrom ll'le Clflct ol !he l---------------1 St Nrwoort !tKll t26'0 R11 slrar at Vote" 11 111t EISI Cht1lnv1 LEGAL NOTICE Amt 11 A wet.on 310 Pr1>0•1tl ~1nta An~ Cel fCH"n 1 Ntwporl l t1<h t26'0 Otc:ll 1tlon cl Ctnd d1cv 11\d flOm lnt> Tll s bv1lntn 1 ttelnt condu<ltd bt tn t on1 by 11>0nsor1 must bt I ed wllll lht lndlv d11al llr11lr1r Ill VDll I II ,,,. lboYI tddre1'1 Amt 1 A Wai.on net 111tr 11\an J on P M o... J-lD 1t71 Tll ' s 1 em rnt filed w 11'1 th• County Oal~ lh 1 SKand d•V « May lt7Z. (tt k DI 0 ante Ccunly on Apr 21 1912 R O H LLMAN I.I.It JtU NOTICE TO CllllDITO•S SUPEll101l COUlllT OF THe STATI 0, CALI FOlll NIA l'Olt THI! COUNTY 0, 01'ANOE N• Anm by !lt vt .,. J /AlddO~ OtPUIV Counlv Deputy C t ~ O anw c ounlY 5u1>tr nl1ml1nt ,U4U nf Sthoo 1 E1 111 al PAUL A !ERNT Otttl~ed NOTICE IS HEAEll Y G VEN to 1111 Pll 1 Creel tors 111 1hr l bovt n1ml!il d!!c:tdenl 11,7°12 11111 •II Pt:rsons ll1vlne c •ms 1111 1111 1h1 l"ub 1lltd O tn'• C~1st 01 lv P ot Pub ls/Mii Oranoe CotU Dally ""•Y 1 I 15 n lt11 11"' n 111av 1 11 n 1tn y d ll1t~n1 1 e rr<1ul f'd t:i I It thtm ----L=EG_,.A...,.L..,.N=o=TI=c=Ec---· 1 ·----,L=E=G=AL"""N"OTl==c=E=---w 11'1 lht ntcen1rv YDUtlltrl n Ille 11tfl(I of !ht t 1 k ot lhe above t nt 1 f'd (DU 1 a lo 1r•w"* llltm w II th• ner:tl11'' ,ICTIT10UI IUSIHESS NOTICI!! TO c••OttOlllS vaud'lllrs. re 1111 vnderi 9nl!il tl lllr 1111 <e ffAMI ITATIMENT SUPl!RIOlt COU•T 0, THE Ill htr 1tlorneys McOWEN GREEN I. Tiit foltow nt 11tr10fll 1rt d~ !'It STAT• 01" CALl,-OlllNIA POtll SYLVIA 150 Elll Cll1pm1n Ave""'' THI! COUNTY 0" 0111.lNOI Or1"" C1llkl<N1 t1"6 Which 11 the bu1lntu 11 Ht. A "6JI 01.tct of bu1lneu of '"' unde 1 9otd In t it WHOLESALE AUTO EXCHANGE 141 E<lo<o .... WESLEY M. ELLIOTT ll'llltlrt p1rl1lnlM ta 1111 tlllt1 o1 1• d E 11111 StrH t Bldt C CDlll Mttl '" Otc:t•ltll dectc11n1 w It'll!\, four months 1H1r 11\t C~1~1!'21c Kllll'lbldl tU Gtv1rnot NOTICE IS HE1'El'f G1VEH 'II llll firll PUbllclflOl'f"ol ll'llt notlc.1 lt•er• Cost• Mes• c1u1 mu. creditor• of 1111 above Nf'Md 6ecedtlll Dettcl F1bt11•ry 1 1tn A!lrtd c Elltn«t 20t Toou ltlboa NI •n Pf""°"''"'-'"' (11lm1 Hlln,1 ..... DOROTHY FAYE KUHLMAN 11 •nd Calif ., .. , will dtttdtnt .... .....vtr.d la 1119 ttlem EkKVlrl• ol !Ill Wiii of thll buslnnt 11 bil"' condlKt .. h' 1 wlll'I !Ill r«t1Nll'V IPOUClll I In llll otlflcl llll 1bovt llafl'ltd 111U0111I Gtnerll Par1nenhtp ol lhl cit,., of Ille tbovt enlltltcl CCM'I • McOWIN G•llfll & IYlVIA Merle c Kitm~dl JO 1>r1Mnl thtfri with lilt r11ctH1ry ue •••I C~ll Aft- A Ired c E1rmor1 voucner• lo tM Ylldtrtltne<I If "" office ClrtltM (I llOl"llll ,.,,..,, 'thlt sltltmtnt flltd wll!I thl (llullll' of lt\tlr tllo!'MV Ptvl Ill H•nn1 11\ttorlll'I' Tth 17141 'JS.Sitt Cltrll of Or•nH Caunl'f et! Aot 21 ltn If Lnt Hlrbot' L.ew l ulld !'It .,, Elli Altwlltys flt' l •Klltf1• ~ IBtYtrl'f--J ~ OHMY c-tY 1111'1 ltrMI C:..I• MMe. eauror..i. ~!di i-vtllltl'lllf Or.not eo..t 0.11y Piiat Cltr~ 11 !ht .i.ce II INslMsl of the Vnde I lne<I MIY I IJ n, 21' 1972 llt1 n ,,,_,, 111 •II 111111C"r1 " 11lnlnt let thl 1111 t ot1 ----::~c:-cc:--:'.cc=c-=----I Pub ltl!rd o •rit• (0111 01llv Plot 11\d dttadtnt wl"' four monlllt 1fltr 11'1t. LEGAL NOTICE MIY 1 I 15 n .. ,, 1101 n llr11 pUblltlllDll DI 11111 llOl!(I 011tc1 Mav 1, 1tn Vl lLLIS MELVIN ELL IOTT NOTICI TO ClllEOTTORI VEll:ALEE ELLIOTT McOONEL l ieu fltl-411Ji' u cc I co-Euc111or1 of llt w A bulk lr~n~fcr t1 #bout ta iw m•o. SUPli:lllOll (QU'tT 0' THE el llll 1t10ve named dMedtnl Tl\-n1me1 and bu11ntl$ •ddr11111 af IT.I.Ta OP CALtl'OllfftA fOlll PA\Jt.. A NANNA the lf•ftl trar 1r1 THE CQUNt'i' OF OaANGI Allotllt'I' II Utl Ht blrt Miiier Ind Jlmm e G ••11111 CASI' NUMlllll_ D JGU40ll """"' .__ lulNllili I ~ E tl •lbol 8 \Id l t rt>oa Cal ICM'ft 1 SUMMOfl!S tMA•JtlA 4lt •••I lntl lln1t Thi fttmfl .,.., lto.ltlMU lddrtttt1 of lfl ,. !hf ""''rl11t "" 11ttl110l\ll' c .. ,. MHI (t>llf the lrlMt.l'H ..... IHA"ON A l(IHCl(IHElll IT'lll Ill""""* Tll (1l4) ,....,..., Lyn11 a1rn1rd ll•Ms 1~ N t nl ().l!OlltGE s l(ltKKINElll to the 111 .. AlltrM" "' C.-1.Jttc'Wltn PotftNllll Plec:1 lM Ante* C1Urorn11 ~ CEOltGI I KINCKINEk f'Vbl tlltll ~·!IH Ctttl Da lly Pllol l\H Plflw bullM11 r1Mfttl •nd ffdre1u1 Tl!• Pl! I 01'141' h11 llltd • Pfllllorl Uiflo May n. 2t a!'Mt J\ollllt t IL 1'71 1:M>'71 ul.td lllv ni. tr•ntftrwo' wlltlln 111rn Yl •rs ctt11ln1 yovr f1'11nt"1 You fl'll V nit • 1111 _.., .. ttr 11 llnown to llll wrltleti ftU1011M wlltlln ltllrty dt'ft of 11\ot LE~., NOTICE tr1ntl1r" are llttf tl\al tl'llt Mm\IMlll hi Mt"ttd en "' ~ Ntint 11 nv •n 1'0 t 11 • wrltttn ''""'* Tht loc.ttlofl 11'111 Mllfr'•I fttc•1•0tn o1 wltl\111 II/di lllflt. revr dlf1vlt "°"' ltit IU .. •llllOll COIJlllT 011 THI lhl •rDPtr1Y to 1111 tr1Mftrttc1 1r1 eni.i"td .,.., ,... cwrt INY tnt.1' • ,.. ITATI! 011 CAU,Ol.NIA tJOtll Stedl; In ''"' lbrt1trtt. 911111"9\IM fr\#11 coN1lnl11t lfllundlve « 011!" trdert THI COUWTT Of' OllANM •l'ld IOOd WIH • 1 Cltt11l11 bfft llfor (JtM.lf'nlnt> dlvtll~ ti PfOMi'IV tl*lltl AO tm lto.ltll\l'lt k110W'11 .. TM 01\lt'V" l lt E ,.,,...,. dt Ill we.ton dllM ""'"" -" CITATHHI .. bOt I Mf., lllbol Cit fol'yil• tatNTS '""-cett .. Md weft ..,._ nil« 111 fM Mitter of lf'lt ,.ttlt'9n 9' TM alKI ll'ICI !hi llttt .,. "' llfttr H1"lfl•'f ~. 1.J:::::::. tt ...... CORDON I.Ell MIJLLl!t. htlnttllf Miid! fht lllull tnn1f1T' hi 'a lit c-. < -..... ~ ...n-yw 1119tllll fl 91 T• ALlltlll VALLIN W!l'lmlllll lf"t "!!!"~ 9111 ,..., W'l'ltt• ,......,, " •• Dr'd" ot ""'' cwrt 'l'OU 1r1 tMttttw On • .tttr Ml• ». 1m ., ••'* t1 •~"" M .. ; ltf i• f.11141 te IOOHf "-fort ltlti JudM Amerl(a NTl.SA MU Vlt l..ltlt '"' 1 .... ". 11 11 'j,71 Pntldlnt ltl ~1m.,1 I 01 "'• 1bo'te NIWfllrl '-" C..tilorflle Ot Id "*' tnlltltd Covrt en tf\t '10tfl tlty el Jlll'r 01twcl M•., I, 1t71 ll lALlW!LLIAM f.. $I Jot4N 1tl'2. 11 t IS A..M. ti Ill.ti lltY ttltft lll'ld Ll'flll ltn1erf ltrlUQ 11\trl 11 llllw <"'41 H 11'\'f' -reu 1111'1 tlttV lr~ttret (Jen, lht HIMltrt .. G«OM L.._ ""'tiff ,_ tllt Ht rbtrt Miiier BY JOHI i'l'C.•rklf. Mteflflt11 tlf t.nll• Mtirlt Vt 1U11 'V"Of.lr T,.,..,.,.,. 10,11tri'l.uM11H111ns mlflll!' dtu~ tnould 1111 Ill •1•f!tM Jlmmlt O lt•t llf A""'111Y al Lnt OATED:t U..., t. 1t12 tr1t11"ntr 1• MllM. S11ltt JM W I II JOH!t lo\~ 0, AMetlllCA btft ~ C:lltlHlll ttlH '-"'fY a-ta .. ..,.... TrW .. tnffllt; A~ Ttl 111fl JotMttl l 'I' W.,_ l Kklt P 0 ttrll. IW A._., f1tt ,..IMllMI' OtflWlt Ci.t. ~ &tMlr. bll"'""1 !"!All""" Or•• c.tt1 Delly Pnot PllblllMtl Ortntt c .. rt 0.llf Plllif l'\jlfftlltill OrenM c..tt D•tlr ''* ••;i -. n...,. MtrY • n ''" ~WI #I.IV 1. u. 12. "· 1m llJWJ "'""22. 1m 1m.n LEGAL N011CE A11ul 1 Co A lffll ln(t REALITY The absenteei.sm ", Prd 10a Alrco 40d rate due to illne!s or injury " J ndu11r• Aka-111 lt currently averages 5 2 days a :1:;:: ~: year for \\Omen 6 I days for !:!~oe'"1f; A 0.N l ll it men Mortover these figures Alc1n •• '° A co Sid l4 ignore the fact that relatively Atcon Lb u A l•tn )Ocl rew \\Omen \\Ork (n high :1~; ~ managerial posllioru: which !'':'t~, ~ always have been associated :, ::~~1 ':' h AHGD 1 ~ w11 lo1ver absenteeism rates A1 1c1 Mnl u AICIM i 1S and t hus they may b e A lclP•od " Al tl!i!S! l .0 Alkl Supmlil Al ,(11 l{kl d1slorte d Single \\01ncn on a\erage A rAur& '' Akllla P I Kl are a bsent (rom their JObS 3 9 !~~·sv l :g da}s a }ea r a gainst 4 3 days ~~:aie , ~ r And A.I A Es1>1 26!1 or men v. omen a gcu 80 Am His h• AHH l)I 3 1 and over accordtng to a U S Am A F-1 Am A I nes C1v1l S er v 1 c e Comm1ss1on A!•ke 1M A 8rnCI 2 1' study also have I o w e r A er(st 1 20 absenteeism rates than men in ~ ~:.,• 2 ~ this age brackel A c1n "' 1 • Am Cem 'I A CnM 1 ltd Am Ch1rn P.1YTH Women switch )Ob!I Amt Se .o Al'nCS1>r ~ '> much more frequently than Arncv1n 1 men do !b1 s~TJ'111 oJ A Oual lid AOu 1>1 t.111 REALITY Labor Depart :;::::e-'i11.!c,1t m e nt studies show I ha t !~ ~s~' 1 f~ \\On1 en s Job cha nging rates ! ~n"s~' ~}d n re JUSl slightly h igher than A Gn ns !1 AGP!llO r ates for m en And m e n a re Am Hos 46 A Home l 17 mor e ltkel) to c hange oc AmHo " ~1 h Am •w 1W cup at1ons l a n \\Omen A Me<i c 1i A MedH:o I' MYTH A l ei(• •O In 'his h h Atl.C 1>I J I g Ame Moto I I od AmNOs 2 » unemp oymen per1 \\omen Am st•' 11 are tnk1ng )Obs ay,ay fro m :"s~rft f°i men the traditional breadw1n-~~s s~,..; J2 ners .-.mSldpl 4,,. AmS!tr I Sl AmT&T 260 REALITY In 1971 an ~\",,\11' w~ average of 18 5 mllhon m ar :'tl.-~r·~~ ~ rted women were in the labor :~e ~ 1 'k force against an averige of 3 :z:~ '~c .. '°1 m1lhon unemployed m e n :f:l.~•c nc ~ Thus If all these married !::;.~:P ,,. \\Ome n quit a nd 1f all the t.!:.~ c1a,g unemplo)ed men m o ved In to 11. ta 01 26J h Arn~ p 68 I e1r empty JObs there \\OU]d A.m~ ed l<i 2 r em a in 15 5 milhon unfilled ~~i~~• 20 Jobs-ca using one of the most ~~~~ 11~oa., horrendous economic d isa sters :~c~~c14'1 1mag 1nable \Vhat s more fev. ::~00 1 1~ Of today S unemployed men :J'L;IC cro~ have the education slulls or AA00Pa1 • 1 l>l>I ~ M<i other q uatif1cahons to hll Jobs !R,~ ~~ l 1! held by women a s secretaries 11.rc11erD11 1 nurses school teachers :~(:' ~s er :; Ar"" D St MYTH Women for pin money i(le11 R tDv work only ~:C~sr 1 1l l'mV"'I ~ rnu Ck to ArmstA l 6i f 'o Coro tci REALITY Of the 33 m1lhon A~1110\nd1 ~ \Vomen Jl(]W 1n the labor force 1~sg:"'~rr: nearly half are work 1 n g A~sosa 1 20 ~~soc T ~"' because they are s 1 n g I e ATlll_. )Od .IA -.1 1\1 CIVE I (Q WluuWi=\I divorced separated t 'i101 ~ • or have very low income A~:h '~J1dti! husbands !1/RcC:~rJ ~ Al as Corn ATO ltK n rtlVTH Tra1n1ng women 1s :~Jao:::, ~~ a waste of money s 1nct they ~~c: co c:,rr, a quit when they marry or have A~o •r '' AvervPd u c hildren Av~ Cid Avn.t al /" AvonPd 1J REALITY The separations Aitec: 0 1 ' I E f!!&W I SI are on y temporary ven tak R:ter t.• ~ 1ng into account her ch ild ~tGr, 1 , 1, rearing non working years =liii!F°':ic4V: the a verage woman worker :!~:~ '~~ has a \vork hfe expectancy of ~~~'o!N~ ~ 25 years For a single woman 11111ts T 211 l •tbtrOU 4 the avera ge is 45 years vs an fll1r<1 r 11: l II r r Bl5(1n 4 over a a verage o 43 years or ~a.tnM ~Sd _, I B4t~s 1. al 1 men marr1t'U or sing e 11.u. n<1 '" &~uscht.. '' 8111.l•th L w MYTH M d Ilk I Bl~te L J en on 1 e o "•yu~c" •o "or k fo r \I omen l:!:t ~:s 1 5! REALITY Notes the 1~~~0°1'~ 1!.c_hA 60't Department or L a b o r s itMC11 c 111.11: W B ••coP! 509 omen s ureau Most men 1t111en 1 10 ho I bo At dgH :10t1 w comp am a ut women !e &Hll .I() SUpefViSOrS h8Ve n e V e r a:~ 'i0 I 18 worked for a woman ' And a 81:~c·a '1 l study reported a fevt yea rs ,ncaar 2 • 8enC pf 4 )II back 1n the Harvard Business e,Hlt'1111 '" ritv Pho Review disclosed that a clear ae111 s 1 , 70 I A9 l l\dl7 ma1or ty of 59 percent of the a eek o~r 1 men canvassed d id not down : ~ 'LJ,"i.1n '1 grade v.omen m a nagers or ~1~~~f U supervisors R~s~ •,.e ~l !IOI' nq c 40 Ao e C11 ~s l\fYTH Wo men fall apa rt In Bond l "d~s 8ook Ao I 71 a cr1s1s ~~:\~r 11,., 8orman1 In REALITY l n the v.ords o f ~ostke~~ 11: Charles D Orth a ca1 eer :c~n":r 1~ development spec1ahst 1n a ar gg' , ni Brls Mv 1 70 r ecent Harvard Bus 1ness e r'""I " • Review Jf m en are present :rO:,'tt111*t d unng a cr~1s they expect :~;i:HJ1 pfil the women m vblved to become arvt1G1 1 11 emo tional a nd fall apart -:r~w~P 'rn; and women often do oblige :rii:r ~ !: But somehow if men are Brumw11. 1' b Bl>CV E l )0 a sent women usually rope el.llld comp qulte well ' ~~~'D, 1~ Mesa Firm Sales Up BufF<1120 au av! bO !lunk R1 mo 8u111t ~f I Bu i n 1 40 l\u r~o 1 j\U N pf !S &u ndVC 10 B~ 01'1! I~ BV\h Un vr C1bot Co 70 C.Otnc:1 Ind <;•n •r, Wd Standard Pacific Corp cit 1 F-INn~ Id I '" I-' C• 11"'1 M n res entla wl \ling company C1m1tu. 1) in CMta Mesa ear ned $152 247 ~:::,,s.: 1: or 6 cents NOr .share m thr t •n •rw "'° r Can Pl( u f:lnt quarter 1m This was up c1na1 " 1 10 loo l f h tap CU lrd over pe:rcrn rom t e ca~tHld "' M9,.39CS or 3 cents per sharr ~~ 1'\! from the: year btfore a s.sum carn111 to , .. 1 11 •u c::e 01r 1 .w ....,u \luUon ~•L1 "' Revenuet from all sources '11 11 r« .Jo C::I , ,,c, ,tO tncre.as.ed 52 nooi-cent I O C• c111 1 rv Ca•G•n t!O '31991 004 a s compa red to a ~· i w1 ~ restated $S 899169 for th!:! :11tf,~ , : prior year c 1 co"' C I C 9 ..i The company ha! increased Ko c. ti \1nri1 l the number ot: develo pments .,,..,. ,_, ..-~ftl Jiii wu1.1er con1 truct1on and ..,r.. c..r rtpOrted orden for new homes :i'tt l ·H loo I th erilll" l~ up over percen over e ~ ~l ~·l! same. period 11st year c.\M~ ,~· Nin "" tM"J Nltll LN (IHt Olt .... ... 1"'-I Nltll lell C-. (lie. ll ~ii ~ J~ ,, ... ''" ~ w .. '"·-~ ....... IM o-+ ~ 11\1.+ •• ., ...... ~ t +l . 11~+ u It + • nu+•• ~" '~-'" )I .... ~. .. t-\9 lJI +2 • 'ltly Sister Eileen': - Costa Mesa Stages Screwball Comedy By T0~1 TITVS ~ "MY llSTIR EILIEN" ,. choice tor tJ\e role of the · J,,:m,d~~ov!0~~~:c.~1'~; .r~ OI 1111 D•ll, '1111 1!1!1 One of the pJea.~ant pieces of ''"'"'11,.,1, '"'""1,11 dlrtcior 0,~1" \\/reek, an athlete corutantly thNtrical memorabilia left in Pl~m•.,, Dr0d11tr+1111 1n111 ... 1 Lo•J the cu rrent n 0 5 ta I g i a :., ~ ~~. bYMJ•~" ~;~;~'· /{,-;:~'.. in training, but he handles his F"rld•Y• 11>C1 s.1o.1•d••1 11 1 JO '"·-~ assignment qu ite well Alan backwash iS the type or play Ju"" l a l lftl COfT'rru,.,lty Pe<:1t•!IOt1 . btst deSCfibed as a "screwball '"'"' <>'I '"' o'""'" c e u" 1 v Hart can be faulted only for •',','.',"~, n<11. Co111 M•••· ••M•••lion1 giving newspaper bad ccmedy." The y don't really JO men a write them any more. 50 com-'THI CAST name in his uproar Io us E11"" ~"'""-0eor1 £ .. ,1,.. performance as I h munlty theaters are probing Ru11> s,,.,,.._ ..• o ..... SPerlf•• a cc erous lhr. arthive!! to unearth them. f',_'. ~.~ou· ·· ·· r.~:.!""1.'~;;-1~~ reporter. Barbara Garlich, as ihlc Cl••k . . " • ., H••' the swinging former tenant, There 11ctual1y are only t11i·o Jot~:'w111~'.'' · 111~0fi(}~';;,~~ gels her message across with prerequi1ile.~ for a screwball ~r:1:~ L•PP•rlfan .• 11.,b •• :0G.~\~~ an excla:-nation point. comedy -a huge cast of ou,,,, LOl'lie•" 1 f>u•• k"'PO'~ Unusual Ch'r'cters •nd 8 P'·'·t J~, .. ~., w.n,.... a.,...,, Bill Ackerman, as t he ., v FIUtlll• (.on1ul Con1r~ Pnul (11a,,1ll •e•tlered with un<'xpected '""" w1c1~ r.~a'''" \1>111...,." pla iner sister's ht-au, gives a ....... M" 1h~r-l~., llJ•l•o" r I nd . . com ings and goings j n P•o•a~H ·• t'"•M """'1""~ o u1•91>1 so JC a convincin g account F lfll •;c1 J:"a Nfrd A>ll of 1,,·,n-11 ,. ' I th numbers la rge or small . One ~eca"d •1d o<ellv ~11111iar" .,;,,. r one o e Of th. •·tier C•ampleS ,., '", 1", PaflU9U"~ (fdt" Qom (la,,..lla, Jot>" Stra1ghteSl ro)eS (Jf lhe ShOW. ~ " • U•dll. Siu Fld>e. WOOd • F1nl!nau1tr l\. ' I t . DAILY ,ILOT Slllt ,~~II Sister Eileen," nov,o being ------Jal'k 1urray is less believable given a most enjoyable re vival the ou tside world as seen R!I the Greek landlord , Pt!.rtly 'HI , THERE' -Barba~ Garlich waves •pixillatedly at her astonished nei gh· on the stage or the Costa Mesa through the window of a base· for Jiiek of a credible accent bors . (from_ left, Roi:i Gibb, Debra Ensign. Alan Hart and Diana Spencer) as Civic Playhouse. ment flat With this l'iingle and party for deficiencies in she is carried a\\1ay in a scene from "My Sister Eileen" at the Costa ~lesa Civic · · k "E'I .. · I led timing. Lori J•1urtner, as Pl h With "Eileen," though, there g1mm1c , 1 een is e eva ay ouse. f ed to Benedict's paramour, a 1 so---''---------------------------------la a third requirement. without rom a &<>-so-com Y , an b I falls a bit short of her sweet-which the first two would fall a so ute romp. and-sour character. rather flat. This is a view of Pa ti Tambellini, in dir ecting Paul Caldwell does tr•.ple du-GWC Off s the Costa Mesa produ ction, gets good mileage out -Of the ty in the produc~i~~· ta~ing his ers ummer ele vated passing show. though best shot as a v1s1t1ng fireman Tlieater l '""" 1~u•• 01 "' ~''•0 ••• ...... " ····· , ...•. ' ' -.... "' .. , ··-.. ·~·· ······-·· .. -· .. ·-Po11liv1!y h~ch Tu1Mlov Olr'o'8rReed Gerald ncChaplrl ZP6 ··----a .. c .... Af-- GENE HACKMAN i'ON COIT\Jlll.fOX PRE SE ITT ~:M~~' ~:r: '01•11~1\•I~\! t101r '•J·rw.·~ ....... .. '"'U''" ON A <llAOl'0 ·cat»I · wn1>r •r" • ~O<O!~ ••" "' "" U Ult• OU OI' ''~•I• I•• r ... '"" 1 .... !~11 0! i ...... ''TNI ILACK llllY •' "'' 11 ...... , •• P I•' lklND MUI DlRS" <62 iot••-1to• 10"'"' """ "•••1 ....... ...... ..... . ... . . .. ' • the space for co mings 11.nci in the wrong apartment. goings is a bit cramped. Often \\'illiam Spencer is quietly a scene of que~tionable con-riotous as the burly Sv.·edish sequence onstage vi'tll be jan itor. l.ouis Leopold as a embellished with some defl watchfu l cop and Uiis Wilson upstaging at the window. as an even more \l."<Jlchfui mother are both effect iv e. The Joseph Fields-Jerome h"I p Chordorov comedy is set in w J e enelope Dueight's frac- 1950, when New York was still tional scene as a prospective Fun City, and follows the tenant is a romplete howl. misadventures of two Ohio After the incred ibly funny second act curtain scene in-sisters trying to make it big in the big town . One is a stunning volving a quartet of admiring beauty wilh: designs 0 n Portuguese naval cadets, Broadway; the olher is at· anything would be an- traclive -but plain by com· ticlimactic. w.b.icll~is. w~ -the parison _ and h 8 r b 0 r s third act might appear to drag llttrary ambitions . ., 8 . bit. What comic bonbons emerge from this act are sup· The Costa Mesa production plied chiefly by the skills of displays splendid casting in Hart and Miss Spencer. these t11i'o central roles. Deb ra ··~1y Sister Eileen .. may not Ensign plays the title' part, the be the season's best cornedy. voluptuous blonde, \\'il h a but it i'! up there among the sharp balance be I wee n mo st entertaining and im- midwestern s"·eetness and aginative. It continues for two gritty determinat ion. Diana more weekends. Fridays and Spencer is equally effective as Saturdays, at the Community her brainy sister, tossing off Center eudilorium on the s e I r~eprecating comments Orange County Fairgrounds, whll"e allowing a look at the Costa Mesa. real woman behind the wit. 1~;::=========:;:; Emerging as the solid stand-JI out in the lar11e ensemble Is Ron Gibb as the timid drug· gist who pursues Eileen with frre lunches and givea\\·ay gifL"!. Gibb employs his ~larvin Kt1plan mannerisms lo peak effrct in a hi la r i ou s performance th at sets a dif- ficult pace ror the others to follow. Gene Benedict is an \!logical "'CABARET' IS GllnERINGL Y BRILLIANT. IT DESERVES TO BE A CLASSIC." -Wl,.,INCI Bi.w.t, L.A.Her1lct-Exa"""1 SOITll COAST PlW 1-C.OSll Mm · 5.16-:711 Alt tlTI' TllUH:E 1-Ontte • 999.wz w .. kd•I'" 1:ao, 1:11, 1n.l' p.m. Sol. & S~n.: l:lC. l ·•S, I OQ, I n, 10.:IG pm. SHOWTIMI 7:00 P.M, Sforrl119 Chortn l ro11sa• Jack Pala11ce I ALSO PLAYING I rwoodJ allell'I "bananas" Ca11,h111on S1111day Sttow 2:00 P.M, A summer Program in theater arts 1\'ill be offered at Golden \\lest College beginning J une 16, officials al the Hun- tington Beach campus ha\·e announced. The program , ll"hich marks' the first time theater has been offered in summer session at I the collegt, "'ill culminate in the presentation of two plays j iq_ J.he .. new ..£.(1.m m u.n.Lt > ., Theater in August. Selection or Mtht .plays has not been an· nounced. 0'\\o'e have an outstanding nr1v fariliry," said theater ! arts instructor Ch a r I e s Mitchell, "and an opportunity to ha ve adul!s and high school students experience the full range of theater arts." Students v.·ill become In· HELD OVER! T1'M IHI Furn ... S11rflllf Ev1rr BALBOA THEATRE 673-4048 4110·W•f! Sltr" Solll'HI VtntSSI lrd9r1Y I Oltl!ll• J1duon "MAltY, QUEEN D" SCOTS" "'WUTHERIHG HEIGHTS" Cerroll Baker ,, "SWEET BODY OF DEBORAH" I Al•• '" "SWEDISH FLY GIRLS" ~ • ,,,, ''HOSPITAL " ••• AND "MARV QUllN Ofl ICO'TS" _.._. -..:..n STADIUM •/.".' ... ~~=-=-----·· STADIUM"! ',' ,_ ....... ~~ ·--··,-..-. STADIUM ·I . ..~I..~ • "DEALING" "' 11·--AND "WHERE'S POl'l'A" E~dUllYt Or•~· C111ntv RtMrYlld Sttt En919tme"I Homl"•fld fer I Actd.,11y Aw1rd11 "l'IDOLEI OH THE ROOF0' Acldlmy Awtnl Wl111ttr J1nt 1"011(11 "KLUTE•• UI) l lH '"SUMMllt OJI 'n" !Rl "CHA'TO'S LANO" & "DOC'" S!•N'l"t l'•Y• Dlln•••"I' "MARK Oil' THI OEVIL" "Lll'S SCARe JESSICA TO DI.I.TH" "SWEDISH FLY G111LS" .... "SWl£T I DOV 01' DlllORAH" "KLUTE " {RI 1---AND "S.M1Mr •f "'Z" ( l 1 KOCM stereo103FM the sounds of the harbor lighting. costumes. makeup . and theater management. he said. be held June 12. and open registration for others June 13. I~ and JG. Classes \l'ill meet Regist ration re:-con tinuing l\londay through Friday rrom day and evrning students 1rilt 6:30 to 10:30 p.m. June 19 be held evening students \\·ill th rough August 11. .-~-"----''-~~~~ ENDS NE XT TUES. Also J ames Coburn J ennifer O'Neill "THE CAREY TREATMENT" "THE FRENCH CONNECTION" !RI STARTS WEDNESDAY EXCLUSIVE "SKYJACKED" Mcndiy, Ma_y 22, 1972• OAILY PILOT !_l Cavett's Shaky Are Talk Shows Losing Clout? Ry CYNTHIA LOWRY NEW YORK 'AP ) -Dick Cavett·s sho\v is on three months probation at ABC. Da\'ld Frost v.·iH drop his syn- dicated series in midsummer In favor of ·his weekly .revu e and occasional spec ials. Does this mean the nighttime talk shO\V ls an endangered telerision species? Opionio n an1ong the experts ls split. but the consensus seems to br that the problem faced by these tv.·o and some others is more that of supply rind demand than the quality of talk. "I think there Is a parallrl in NBC's experience years ago v.•ith the 'Today' show ." said a network executive who asked for anonymity. "There had been nothing like that in the n1orning when the sh o w started. It caught on with the public and the advertisers. Then CBS came along and thre1v in some competition - Jack Pa ar and Ernie Kovacs. :~~ Al NEWPORT They d1~<1ppl'arrd because by that tinle 'Todny' was en• lrenchrd 11·11h its ;iud(enre . It 11·as hard lo fig/1! it '' The sarne pattern. he belie\·es. is n1aking the oth er end of !he broadcasting day a b a ! t I e gr o u n d now . The ''Tonight ., show on NBC brctime popular Wilh Steve Allen and went on to be the 1110s! talked·about show on the air during lhe Jack raar day. Nov.· it has nailed do1\·n a big and appctrenlly unmovable au· di ence "'ith Johnny Carson . ··There has been lot~ of competition." the rxccutive continued. "ABC tried Y.'i!h Jerry Lev.·is and Joey Bishop before Cavett. ('BS had t.1erv Griffin. The truth is that there art• just a cerla in number of TV sets that stay on in !he late evening. \Vhen too many shows compete for the same audience. and for the ad· verlisers' doll ars, it Is a setup for fin11ncial disaster -for the nel\\'orks and for their af· filia!es." _J~~~~24 hours a day R l llll l(Tla --11 .......... ~ ---1--OPENS WEDNESDAY MAY 24 I " ._,..,,.---- Monday's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List ·LMomentum Dips :on Stock Market '. NEW YORK (AP)-Sto<k market prices moved tnoderttely higher today, but the upward momentum Ill the put two se51ions apparenUy bad 1ubaided. v.n... Aue vc• cs .411) V-.ctrl" l.llO ... ... ,-----------·· ... ""' U9' C'llM Ole. • • ._A.L -.. (11111.J ·-.... -... .... ... CNl.I Mii' Law C-. Qla. .,, • • ' I . . . . ' , %Q DAILY PILOT MOlldil)', Moy 22, 1972 Some plain Responsible Republicans Can Decide Which One Win s. And the Choice Is Clear. Andrew Hinshaw. He is a responsible, conservative Republica n who has bee n a loyal member of the Party since 1956. Hinshaw's record in elective office in Orange ·county has p1oved he's a man of ability, honesty, and integrity. Hinshaw believe~ you want your views spoken in Congress by a responsible, mature leader. Hinshaw wants lo represent you and your views in Congress. Hinshaw believes your Congressman should support the Party and the'Presidenl. Hinshaw knows -and he knows you know, too -that your voice and your views have been largely Ignored for the pas t 22 months. The responsibility fo r failing you belongs to Schmitz. This Is the record of failure : In the 91 st Congress, Schmitz oppooed Nixon legislation 6f% of the time, en eKCeedingly strange record for• Member who lays eny cla im to being in lllPWllh hla Porty'• posilion. During th is same ·PlriOCl..&chmitzVOled 29% of the lime in agreement with the ADA (Americans for Democratic Action) posrl 1on on legislation. In the first session of th e 92nd Congress, Schmitz opposed the Presi dent 42.5o/o of the time. Of the 11 5 times he voted against the President, Schmitz prevailed {with Democrats) only 12 times. During the curren t (second) session of the 92nd Congress, Schmitz is disagreeing more than ever. He has opposed.the President's position 85% of the lime. And the Party 56% of the ti~e. His voting record proves conclusively that Schmitz is not speaking for the great majority of Republicans he was elected to represent 22 months ago. On the record it is clear he speaks for,·and advances only, the views of the radical right. ·Schmitz is the on ly Republican Congressman supporting Ashbrook against Nixon. Schmilz Is the man who said of the Presidenl's trip to Peking: ''I'm only worried that he will come back." Hardly lhe words of a responsible and ~ mature person. 1 ' In sharp contrast, a·s a responsible, loyal Republican Andrew Hinshaw has pledged his unqualified support to President Nixon for the President's re-election. Hinshaw Is pledged to support the programs end policies of the Republican Party in ·Congress. He is a teamplayer. Hinshaw is pledged to represen t ygu and ygur views with reason and responsibility in Congress. He has proved by his record in County office that he a/ways keeps his pledges. Hinshaw believes this Is the time for responsible Republicans to speak up and say at the ballot.box that while we may be conservatives we have had enough of being llnked with political radicals. Ruponolble Republlcano: You c1n uy It 1trongly ind nnn11 by voting for HIMlllW on June 8. Your vole will tell the world that we are determined to send the right man to Washington to do the job that responsible Republicans want done for Orange CClllllY 1nd the Nation. I I I I I I I fP•N l"tlltll:ll ....... ...,.,..Q 6 To: Hinshaw for Congress P.O. Box 4062, Santa .Ana , Callfomla 92702 I want to hEilp Andy Hinshaw. Here's my check for_.$5;----Sl O; __ $20; _$50;_$100. . . . .• . . . . . . ' . . . . ' . . • Address_·--------------;:..: . . . . . Phone·'--------------....;;-. . . OCCupetlon/Buslnns Address-------...;;, :; : . · .. ~ . ·~· ... ..... ... . ·.: .. :. ... .. ·=· . . .. "~·· .-"' •" ....... .... ·"" ~ • .. "'• .._, ... s I want to work. Call me ____ _ A RHI RepublkMt HINSHAW Who •RI 19p-1 Yot1 In c_,,,_. ----- - --. --- • I .1 j I i l J I I ,.1 1 7 I 7 1\ ' ~----., ......... --------• Lagu11a Beaeh EDITl'ON 'I'oday's Fl•al N.Y. Stoeb VOL 65, NO. 143, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, MAY 22 , 1972 TEN CENTS Reagan Calls for Vote on Death Penalty Ban By TOM BARLEY 01 Ill• D.lllr Plloll ll•tl Gov. Ronald Reagan today in Anaheim urged "every Californian with a con- science" to sign a petition that would put the restoration of capital punishment in- itiative on the ballot in November. Reagan told the annual meeting of the California Police Officers Association in Disneyland Hotel that "the state owes you the fullest protection in a duty that daily becomes more hazardous . • 0 1 see that US lawmen were killed in the line of duty In Ibis country last year. Twenty-three lawmen and correctional officers have died in California since January, 1971," Reagan said. "One is too many,'' Reagan declared to the cheers of the standing lawmen. "I want a mandatory first degree murder trial for anyone who kills a police officer," the governor said. "A bill to this effect has passed the state Senate and is now before the Assembly and I urge the IXOD Green Power Plant-i11 Effort Grows in Laguna Big ones, small ones, green ones, brown ones -plants in all shapes, sizes and colors gravitated to the Laguna Main Beach Saturday in what may have been the first "plant-in" in citY history. A load of used brick also arrived and was quickly arranged in a giant 30-foot heart. The plants were donated by Laguna citizens and businesses. The "Plant-in" st.z.rted about 10 a.m. and continued throughout the day with people dropping off plants and city workmen sinking the gifts in the vacant area adjacent to the Main Beach. The plants were left in their containers so that when work begins on the park area this Fall. workmen will be able to move. them with a minimum of fuu. Plant& will be med In the permanent Arrests Made landscaping plan. Some of the items were more pet than plant according to owners who brought them in car trunks, trucks and sports cars. Ken Komweibel. an actor in the Laguna 11oulton Playhouse production of "Dear Ernest," said that his donated pine tree was nursed back to green health from a brown breakdown some time ago. He said he thought it was time to return the tree to nature. Jn au, nearly 75 plants now grace the once vacant lot. They're arranged into three mini-parks set off by the donated brick. Other plant.s too large to leave planted In their temporary containers have been taken to the clty llW'&er)' for care until ready !or planting. Police Repel Protesters In Melee at Pentagon WASHINGTON (AP) -Demonstrators attempted to enter the Pentagon shortly after their legal permit to demonstrate expired but were repulsed by police. About 100 building guards pushed back the head of the ragged column or pro-- testers and began making arrests. Among those taken into custody were an.- tiwar leaders David Dellinger and Father James Groppi. (See earlier story, Page 4). At first th ere was little violence as guards blocked the forward push and began hauling off demonstrators one by one. But as the effort continued, guards were seen dragging some deruonstrators to a waiting bus by the hair. Police said more than 200 demonstra- tors were arrested. Leaders of the demonstration using a megaphone repeatedly urged the crowd to move forward "gently a n d persistently" and not attempt to storm the building. Quake Rocks Manila Only a fraction of the group tried lo enter the building. They were stopped in tbe middle of the street outside. Another group sat down in the street, while still others stood aside and watched. A few rocks were thrown from the crowd in the direction of guards and newsmen standing on the Pentagon steps. Outside the assault zone, two Vietnam Veterans Again.rt the War burned a green anny coat and a green army shirt to the cheers of the crowd. "That's four years or my life golng up in flames," one o: them said as the crowd sat on a macadam parking lot outside the building. Trash Cleanup Set "Involvement Day," Tuesday will find 90 Laguna Beach students cleaning up trash in the Trabuco Canyon area near the ranger station from noon to about 5 p.m. That night at 7:30 p.m. a film titled ••Mineral King" will be shown at the high school cafeteria. The film, produced by the Sierra Club will be followed by a speaker. ' support of every cati!ornian for this vital mea!Ul'e." Reagan tokl more than 500 top California lawmen that the s t a t e Supreme Court threw out more than 200 years of legal precedent when it dumped the death penalty earlier this year. ·•it reversed its own decision on the same case four years ago and did nothing by its very act to restore any standing jt ever had with the people of California.'' Reagan said. • The governor said another top priority of Californians "both in terms of pro- tecting the public and easing the burden on lawmen" was a long overdue crackdown on pushers and dealers in drugs and narcoUcs. "~!ore than 99,000 adults and 36,000 minors were arrested for drug offenses in 1970." Reagan said. "More than 1.000 deaths in Los Angeles County alone were caused in that year by drug addiction." Reagan called for a :·stiff upward ., revision" or the jail term meted out to drug dealers and public support !or what he called "a new and comprehensive drug abuse treatment program .•• that will divert the first time user or possessor of drugs away from our jails and prisons." Reagan said participants in the unique program will be given the opportunity "to share in treatment programs designed to' keep them from be.coming addicted and restore them to a normal productive PRESIDENT NIXON AND SOVIET PRESIDENT ·PODGORNY (tEFTJ IN MOSCOW Light Moment Shored After Pre1ldonY1 Arrlv1I 1! Vnukovo II Airport UP'IT ........ Experimental Airplane Crash [(ills Coast Man A Dana Point man and his Oying com- panion were killed Sunday when their ex- perimental, hand-built biplane lost power and crashed into the desert weJt of Vlc- torville. San Bernardino County S h e r I r f ' s depu ties said Floyd Eugene Robinette, 30, of 25222 Brigantine Drive, Dana Point. and James Herbert Richter, 46, of Pomona, were pronounced dead at the scene at the 9 a.m. crash at the west end of El Mirage Dry Lake. Mr. Robinette was employed as an engineer with TRW Systems, Inc., and was a qualified commercial pilot. He is survived by his wife, Reba, and two children. Funeral arrangements are pen- ding at Sheffer Mortuary in San Clemente, Sheriff's deputies said the two men had taken ort in the open-cockpit aircraft and were testing it to obtain Federal Aviation Administration clearance to operate it from commercial air fields. Several hundred spectators watched the airplane lose power at about 60 feet and plunge straight into the desert. The men were attending a flying meet of the Independent . Protective . ()r.der of Taildraggers when the crash occurred. The flying as sociation is made up of owners or the older type airplanes with a strut rather than a wheel as a tail lan- ding gear. Saturday Trash Pickup to End In Laguna Beach There will be oo more Saturday trash pickups in Laguna Beach after this weekend, the department of pubUc work.t bas announced. Beginning next week, areas formerly scheduled for Saturday pickup will be scheduled to other weekdays. Switching from Saturday to Tuesday p,ickup will be most of the streets ln the Arch Beach Heights and Top of the World areas. MANILA (AP) -An earthquake strong enough to sway buildings and send peo- ple running into the streets rocked Manlla today. The weather bureau said the quake registered an intensity of six cn the Rossi-F<ret scale of nine. Hinshaw Blasts Schmitz Other pickup changes announced by the city include a switch to Tuesday from Monday for the Portafma a r e a, from Tuesday to Monday for the Bluebird Canyon area, from Saturday to Wednes- day for portions of Temple Hills Drive, Zell Drive and Cresta Way, and from Tuesday to Wednesday for Shadow Lane and portions of calUope., Carmelita and Santa Cruz Streets and of Temple Terr act. 1 .. X-rated Movie Was Bad Scene ATilENS, Ga. (UPl) -Watching an X-rated movie has cost two policemen six-month .suspenslons. Assistant Pollce Chief Clarence Schutt. told the Athens Civil Serv- ice Commission that he searched for offieers David Hansen and Jimmy Moan! In the doli!rtawn area for over :Kt miJ1Utes the nlght o1 May 3 without finding them. Schultz uid he then ftDt to lb• Paris Adult Theatre, 1 movie house raided In recent mooth1 on obscenity charges, and foord the pelr Ie111ing against the bid nU O'atchinR an x.rated mm. The officers said they entered the theater to make a "routine cbect." ' I 39th Disrtict Candidate Cites GOP 'Abandan ment' By PAMELA HALLAN Of 1M Dall't' P'l)tt Sltlf Andttw J. Hinshaw, a candidate for lhe 39th CongreS!lonal District ~at held by Rep. John Schmitz (R·'J\Jstln), today charged his oppo..,nt with abandoning the Republican Party and President NII· on .S W.11. • Addmslng 1 groop of student& at MiS!ioo Viejo High School this morning, Hinshaw, ln!>Dnbent Orqe County ~ .-, questioned his opponent'• In' tqrlty llld ability to r._t tbe dtizens In Ids dlstrlct. "Atv/ elect<d of!Jclal should have -....y, latqrtty and should 111 whal he means, desptle the po I it I c 1 I coo- ~. without cloubl..aik," lllmbaw 11ld. ··11a lhould -the bills lffectlnc his 6ilrld llld ..... -the -ol 1111 I • constituents despite his own personal v1"rl," Hinmaw con\inued. "He claims to be a Republican, yet he has abandoned the Repoblican party,'' Hinshaw asserted. He cited SchmlU' voting .......i which ~ said showed hbn votjn& against the Republican Pariy and President Nixon 51 l"''Ctnt. of the time ; •Jalnst Jenera! Jlepubllcan pripclples IO percont of the time.and ,igalnst Prtsi~nt Nixon 85 per· call ol the time. HYou cannot have a roan ln politie! who consistently votes aplnst bis party," Hinlhlw 11ld. "He llkel to pniclalm ~ 1 strong defender of the mlll\ary, 11iat's Cine, but does be wte that-...y? ••• No." Hinshaw uid that oo April 211, a bill woo up lot 1 wte wbldl ""'1ld incrtlse peJ lot millllrJ mm..---- ment benefits ror military personnel. Hinshaw said Sclunitt cast a no vote on that measure. He also cited Schmill' claim of being strongly against drug abuse, set Hinshaw claimed Schmitz wu one of two ~esentatives ' to vote against a blQ Which· would increase money for ln- stllutioos trying to help the narcotic ad- dict. "Schmit. ahollld not engaJe In so moch double-talk," he said. "Or111ge County Ia considered \be most conservative of Republican areas with a national repoatloo for being a bit kooky but perhaps that Ia becaua< o! John Schmit.. "Tbla county cartied California for l'taident Nbctn durinfI tbe lsst eleclioo," (Ste IDNSllAW, Pqe I) Homeowner1 In the affected neighborhoods have been notilled, bill those who are not certain of the new pickup schedule may call city hall for in- formation, 494-ll24. Angola Airplane Crash Kills 20 LOWTO, Angol1 (UP]) -Twenty perseu were, killed when the pllot. of an Angola Atrline1 twin-engine turboprop airliner 0terahot the nmway at· Lob Ito airport In cltnse foJ and cruhed Into the aea, the airline announced. The F27 Friendablp plane, wrying 11 pa.uenam and four crewmen -all Portugune -wu on • scbedultd morn. Inc nipt Sunday from Luanda to Sa DI Bandelrl In South An&ola with llJ Jlrst 810P In LebUo wllm the crasll occurr..s. u..1>amia-.... ll'DC)' ANl uld. '-l place in society." Reagan said lie particularly welcomed what wiH be "the massive use of citizen volunteers to help meet a mounting social problem. .. \Ve hope that we can reach the poten- tial young addict far more effectively than any institutional rehabilitation pro- gram," Reagan said. Reagan drew cheers from his audience when he lauded the late J , Edgar (See REAGAN, Page Z) At Dinner Reception In Moscow MOSCOW (UPI} -President Nixon told Kremlin leaders tonight they together can make peaceful cooperation a reality during their sununit talks th11 week. "Because we are both irepared to pro-- teed on the basis of equaHty and mutual respect, we meet a moment when we can make peaceful cooperation a reality," Nixon said. The President made the statement in 1 loest tonight II I lavllh Alie dinner in honor of hbn, Mn. Ntion and his official JllfltT foar houn · efler hia l!Tlval In Moacow for a week of IUIDJnlt talks. The arrival rec.ptlon was friendly but restralned. Crowd1, largely 1Uen1. watched a motorcade on the 17-mlle trip from Vnukovo Airport to the Grand Kremlin Palace, where the dinner also was held. Nixon'• plane arrived five minute! •head ol the scheduled 4 p.m. Iancijng. The weather was hwnid, the skie3 gray. The Soviet officials were •nimatedly friendly for thia first visit in peacetime to Russia by a. U.S. Ptes.ident. It was late afternoon when the Presf.. dent arrived, and he, Mrs. Nixon and other member• of the official U.S. party were guests at the lavish dinner by their hosts ln the Hall of Facele of the Grelld Kremlin Palace where the Nixons are 1taying. Hi.s face-t~face talks with Brezhnev and the other SovJeU begin Theaday morning. In his ~ tod, Ni.Jon said the eye of the world are focused on the posaiblllty of a Soviet-American agreement to limit strategic nuclear arm!. "An agreement in tlW: area a:x.dd begin to tum our countries away frcm a wasteful and dangerous arms race and (See NIXON, Pase 2) Mrs. Lida Sermuk.s Succumbs in Oregon 1\otrs. Lida Sermulu, a 13-year resident of Laguna Beach died in Portland, Oregon, Thurlday, Funeral services will be held there on Tuesday at the Hu1tad Funeral Home. Mrs. Sermulcs, IO, lived at 10\M Glen- neyre St., Laguna, and only recently left for Oregon. Survivora are 1011, Carl Sermuks of Portland: daughter, Virginia Darby of Glendora, and f i v • grandchildren. er .... Weatller ?.fore smuhlne on the agenda for Tuesday with continued warm temperatures. HJghs at the beaches 62 rising to 72 In tbe inJand areas. IAws 48-53. INSmE TODA 'l' Thr Cotta Jirsa Ci1>ic Play- ho u at and Cht Hvntington Beach Playhom• both opened thtir tta.scm-closing productions OUff th~ Wfekend. Both are tt- vitwtd todav. Stt Enterlain- mrnt, Pag<• 18·19 . I ' "' DA.ILV PILOl LB _____ ..cM_:o_Odc;l1'-''-""....:.1_2_:2':...1_9_n --- 90 Tickled, ~d Wallace oes Wiggle ~"'sJLVER SPRING, Md. (UPI) -Doc· (Ors reported lod•y lhal George C. fallace's toes have shown involuntary rtetlvity and an aide said that Wallace's l!lll tickled bis falher's feel "and his tots moved." 4'he doctors said the development was .. most encouraging." • But they said it waa still (ll!ficult to ascertain whether Wallace wO! recover !rom the paralysls lnnlcttd by a would-be assaS!ln's bullets la!ft Monday aftecnoon. "Over the past l8 hours Ufere hat been some return of involuntary mu scular ac- tivity ta the toes of both feet," aald a medical bulletin from doctors at Holy €roas Aosptt11t. t. "Gov. WaUJice exhibits nonnal reflex reaction wben the sole of his foot ls stimulated ," the bulletin said. "There is alao encouraging evidence or Increasing sensations down to the level af the mid-thigh, The signlficance of these finding as regards to the final degree ol recovery from his paralyala.15 dUflcult to ascertain at this time but I.a: most en- <:ouraging." Elvin Stanton, assistant press secretary to the wounded Alabama governor. said Wallace's son, George Jr., 20, visited his fat her Sunday night and burst Jnto Wallace's staff room after lbe visit, 6hoUUllji , . "I tlckled hit foot and hit tots moved. ').'hen I held up sheet so he could aee It." 2 Die of Auto Injuries; Total For C.Ounty 97 , .. • A housewife and a young man have lost two and six-week fight! for life, becoming tbe 95th and 96th traffic accident fatalities of the current year in Orange County. ~ Victims were idenUfled 11 Mrs. Lor· raine Baker, of 12691 Trask Ave., Garden Grove and Terry Sears, 20, of Fullerton. Sears was injured six weeks ago when his car awerved and spun off ToMer Can. yon .Road near the Orange Freeway oyerpaas and overturntd. He succumbed Friday at St. Jude Hospital Jn Fullerton. while Mrs. Baker ij(ed at St. Joseph's Hospital In Orange the same day from her injuries. She wu standing in her front yard two \iV'eeks ago when a four-wheel triller btoke loose from a truck, careened over the curb and ran her down, lnvestlgators saJd a hitch and safety chain--connecting the tr1iler 1nd truck diJvf!l by Thomas W. Moore, 33, of 171& Sherry Lane, Santa Ana, broke and caused the accident. Deadline June 1 iF or Registering -In Laguna Vote Laguna Beach resldents wishing to vote tn the July 25 recall-councU election may rtglster up to June 1, according to the Registrar or Voters. ,, Scheduling of the special election caused a minor mix-up in voter regl.a:tra- .tion procedures, it was disclosed, since .pll deputy registrars had turned in thelr . tegistration books following the April 13 deadline for the June 8 primary. · Persons wishing to register after the cutoff, but prior to the primary, normally \\'OUld be required to do so only at the central Voter Rgelstrallon Office, 1119 E. Chestnut Ave. Santa Ana, to avoid con· 'fusion over eligibility to vote in the yrimary. . Hoy,·ever. as a convenience to Lagunans who cannot make the trip to Santa Ana, -Oeputy registrar Joyce Dusenberry has :retrieved her book, she said today, and will be available to register persona who <.:all h~r at 494-4743. New voters, and persons who have changed thei r address since last register- , lng. ar:e required to register 54 days or more before the election. OIAMGI COAST LI DAILY PILOT TM CW.Inge Goelt DAILY PILOT, win. 'Wlll(ft It coml:o1111d ~ N-..,....,., h pvi.flslMrd W "'' Onl!Ot CIHSI P1,1bllihl~ Qmpeny. i.,.. rift tdltlO"lt "" P\lblfthed, Mondll' tfl""911 Fr'lcl11, for Colli Miri1, Nrwport IMdl, Hunli~lon l5cK'll/f wn11r" V•lltY, L•t11111• l•dl. ll'VIM/s...GdlfllN('lr; Ind 1111 Cltlftetl!W Sffl J~fl C..iihll'MIO. ,., t l'-lt rt0ltnfll .Ollll:M b-M llllltf-attu..-1'1"' ll!ld ~•Y.. Tnt ptlnelJHI pvlllJ1l'llnt ,i.111 It ti J.» Wftl 81y Strftt, C.lt M .. , C11lf0f11i1, ':i.tlt, Ro1'1rt N. w,,, l'r1tlcl'"' t M htlllt~tt J,.c.k Ill. C11rl1y Vk t Pf"•IO.,f "Id O.W.-11 Mll'llftl" Tho,..,11 K11•il l4110r Tho"''' A. M11,phi111 M111.1tftlfl Edllw Ch11I" H. Looi kic.h1,.f I . Hill ..... t11Mlf MtM•lill EdlfOr'I .......... l_ l2Z F1r11t A•111111 Msili11t .Yllr1n: P.O. 1011 •••• f2612 """'-'. c..~ ,..,_: »I WW Nf ,,,_. I, ' < l#(fl: »» "..,,.,..... lllffwt,.. H.i '-cfl: 1111S 19Mll ......,.,.. 1M Jld ttlltlrl Ill Camllit Ml Toi-ln41 '4MU1 ClwMt4 A•••'I t i MJ·l&71 L..-._. Al '"*' nslflJ tahrt I I 4f4.MU =:.· ~':"~~ii=S .... , .... w • ...., .,.., .. ~ ............ ... .... "' ""'""' .... . .... cw..== .. ,, .. c.t• ..... '""'""· _.._ • " tam. ..... ......,. ., .. 11..1~ ,...,.,..,, .....,., .... .-u .. ....-. Red Tanks Approach Hue 1st Win1ess For Davi s Tali:es Stand 7t1i Fleet Bombardment Halts North Vietnamese Push SAJOON (UPI) -North Vietnamese Uling 1"1'71 1mphlbl0111 lankl 1wanned acrou the My Chanb River defense Une tz mllet north of Hue today In an ap- parent effort to establish a bridgehead. Heavy fighting was reported in the area 01 nlghlfall. The North Vietnamese probing attack, the ~econd in two days, was be!Jeved halted by intense naval bombardment from U.S. 7th Fltet ships off the coast, by Allied alr strike that cos't an F4 Phan~ tom Jet, and by Allied artillery. A South Vietnamese spokerruan in Saigon said tonight the North Vietnamese had been driven back across the river by nightfall, but reportl from lbe orta llaell wtte unclear. U.S. advltera 111d Ibey lbou1ht today's 21ttacks were a "probe or recOMai!sance In force'' rather than an all-out move against l~ue. The North Vietnamese increased their pressure 12 miles west of Hue and car- ried out sharp attacks near Kontum in the Central Hlghlanda, at An Loe 60 miles north of Saigon, and ln the Mekong Delta. South Vietnamese put Communist Josses in those actions at 937 men, in- clud ing 23 tanks on the Hue defense perimeter. Hanoi Radio reported more intense J(leindienst Foresees Organized Crime's End Crediting electro'nic s u r v e i 11 an c e techniques as the answer, Acting U.S. At- torney Genera l Richard Kleindienst today pred icted that America will cripple and totally control organized crime within three to four years. He did not mention any !lpeclfic ethnic groups or individuals, but left litUe doubt in hls references during the Callfornla From Pu11e 1 NIXON •.. tOlfard more production for puce," he said. An hour after his arrival in Moacow Nixon illlpped into a Kremlin office and spent 45 minutes alone -except for two traofl•tora. -wltb. .Leonid I. Brezhnev, secretary general CJf the Soviet Com- munist party, ljle ocknowledged Soviet leader, llusilan sources told UPI cor· respondent Henry Shapiro, Reporters accompanying the Nilons esUmated the crowds en rout e to the Kremlin from the airport at about 100,000 -fairly 1mall by Moscow stand- ards for a major vi.siting foreign dig· nltary. Nixon said before leaving Sab:burg, Austria, where he made a 36-hour rest stop in a fairyland castle atmosphere, that he expected the 1ummi1 talks to be ••the most intensive ••• I have ever participated in on substantive matters." But UJere, were indications the talks might not produce the immediate accord on arms control that bad been expected. The ride tO the Kremlin from the airport took about 20 minutes. Closer to the heart ot Moscow, the sidewalk crowds were thrte or four penonr deep. They appeared friendly but were 1Uent. At the palace where he ls staying in Moscow, Nixon accepted a small glass of cognac along with other American leaders as their Russian bosta toasted Nl.xon's health. The Nixon arrival was seen live on both American and Soviet television. The Amelcan television networks picked up the RUS!ian TV pictures and interposed their own commentaries. Tass, the official Soviet news agency, also gave unusually fast treatment to the arrival. Tass commented, "It is difficult to overestimate the significance of this visit." Moscow television devoted 25 minutes to the live arrival ceremonies. There were a few smiles but no trad i- tional bearhugs or greeting for Nixon from Kremlin leaders. Premier Alexie Kosygin. hardley a smiler at the best of timu, offered his hand to Nixon. Mrs. Nixon took into both arms a bouquet of red flowers. Diplomats noted the absence at the airport of Brezhnev. the leader judged more equal than his equals on the Soviet Union's 15-man ruling Politburo. He had generally been expected to be present. About 200 Russian workers, bused to the alrport, duUfully waved U.S. flags but did not shout or smile. The first talks between Nixon and Brezhnev were planned at l a.m. POT Tuesday. Mrs. Nixon's Tuesday schedule .;ailed for a visit to a' secondary school, a ride on the Moscow subway and a tea. Peace Officers' Association convention speech at the Disneyland Hotel. "A handful of callous, evil, avaricious men who think nothing of murder, ex- tortion, and perjury have become a grow- Jng mallgnancy in American society," he declared. \ "But measures pres~d by this Admlnlstratlon among which electronic surv~illance figures prominently hlve put 1,600 of these top crime figures out of business,'' Kleindienst charged. "We have eliminated half of the leadership of 'the families' and it ls my prediction that in three to four years we will have this cancer completely under our control," he added. Kleindienst said he differed with Governor Reagan's earlier appeal for the restoration of the death penalty "in the sense that I believe we can only have limited. capital punishment whether It be ih CalJlornia-or '8n)'Where-else. "By that I mean the death penalty for poliUcal assassination, the killing of an on duty police officer and the majority of premeditated murder," Kleindienst said. "I don't believe and I never have that we can include crimes of passion in the category advocated today by Gov. Reagan," the acting federal attorney general said. Kleindienst predicted the d e cl i n e •'within a very few years" of the drug problems "that have achieved such tremendous proportions in our society to- day. "It 13 my belief that the Vietnam War which has so distressed the youth of our nation has been a prime ·factor In so many young people turning to drugs as an escape/' Kleindienst said. He blamed "a nation that sent 500,000 .young men who were never told why they were there 8,000 mUu to fight a war while the people at home were tCJld that that war didn't exist." From Pqe I HINSHAW • • • he emphasized. Yet Hinshaw charged Schmitz has been supporting fellow Rep. John Aabbrook of Ohio who is working to unseat President Nixon, Hinshaw said. The county official told a small group of students that he has more to offer than his opp<>nent. Hinshaw said he knows the county bet· ter than any other single individual and is close to its people and its problems. tlinshaw pledged to bring expertise in the area of financing to Congress. llinsha\v also pointed to the county's high rate of unemployment and emphasized that congressmen are in a position to in- fluence the location CJf government con-tracts. He said he has traveled to \Vashington and found that "Schmitz has no rapport v;ith government officials," and this would hurt the county's chances of receiving any government contracts. During a question and a03y,·er session Hinshaw told students: -He supports President Nixon's Viet· nam policies. -He supports the v.·age and price con- trol instituted by the Nixon Administration because or inflation. -He denied that Norton Simon has contributed to his campaign. Court Okays Conviction In Less Than Full Vote IV ASHING TON (UPI) -The Supreme Court In a M ,·ote held today that a state may perm!t convlcllons In criminal cases by less than a unanimous vote of the 12· man juries. The derision can1e in cases from Louisiana and Oregon. Un a n i mo 11 s ,·erdict.s are required in federal courts and most other states. Under Ortgon's constitution, 10 of 12 jurors may tttum a verdict oI guilty ex- cept in murder cases. Tbe Louisiana practict under bOtb law and lhe stale constitution allon con- viction by nlnt of 11 jurora, e:reept when the defendant could be sentenc<d to death In addition, Unanimity la requlttd in lea •ertous .,... .. tried by nv .. man jurlff. Tuar, Montana, Idaho an<I Oklahoma allow lw than WWJlmout vmlldl far minor offenses . In -.... todu, the """" uplltld the a>qllUutlotlalJtl' ol federal and attte lmm11t1l17 Jaws lllOd lo require I wltnoa to al-.. nldetice ar lice jail for """ tempt, '1:bt It•-an ""'1 u a major I lven.pon In the war on organized crime. The ~2 ruling came In test cases challenging the immunity provlslon ot the 1970 rederal crime control law and New Jersey's state statute along the same lines. They are used when a wilneu resort5 to the Fifth Amendment claim that his testimony might tncrtmlnate him. The lmmunily decision deoll with two lypes of exemption from prosecuUon. One 11 known as "m" tnurnmity. Thil pramts .. Iha! a wlln'"' wlll not be proo- eculed for •DYthlnl be soys in bla own testimony or any evtdenct cf a crime dertvin& directly from ii. But It doea not txanp1 him from proo- ecutlon If leslimony by other wt.._ or .. para1e tvldence UnkJ him to a crime. 1be other, much broader type la man to Jawyen as 11tram1ctlonal" lmmuntty. Thls provides be can never be prooecuttd far Ill)' crime in>olved tn bla testimony. The court uplleld .. .,.. Immunity In loclay'a two decltlltm1. I U.S. air ltrlkea agalnal North Vletnom today and aaJd U.S. Navy plan" on Sun- day rtlUllled mlnlng of Haiphong Harbor. There was no ccnfinnation of the reports by the U.S. command but the Pentagon has made it clear ln public statements it ii the U.S. intent to keep llaiphong llarbor inoperable. The command did say It withdrew SCIO American servicemen from Vietnam last \\'eek, but another 400 Mirine Oien: entered the war zone. The net withdrawal of 200 Americans \vas the smallest since the last week of January, 1971, when there were no pullouts. It left U.S. troop strength in Vietnam at 54,800 aa of Thursday. President Nixon ordered American strength dropped to below 49,000 by June 30. An average of more than 2,eoo U.S. troops must be pulled out each week to meet that deadUn,e. · Since the command issued its weekly strength report, another 7770 Marine airmen have been.added to the Vietnam rolls, military sources said. One South Vietnamese victory was reported -in Binh Dinh Province in the coastal high13nds near Qui Nhon. Government troops there recaptured Combat Base Salem Sunday without ma- jor opposition. It was the southernmost Communist poaition in that province where they control most of the northern pOrtton . Courts Sl.at.ed: That's tlie Way Ball Bounces What Is now a cracked, dirt strewn asphalt playground on the I.Aguna Beach High School north campus 13 destlnOd lo become six new tennis courts. High school tennis coach Ronald Hou has received sebool board approval to solicit fwids under the name of 0 Tennil Now" for construction of the courts. Ross expects it will take $50,000 to con- struct the six concrete courts. He has aet $30,000 as a short term goal to start bid· ding, moving a temporary classroom at the location and clearing the site. The tennis coach said he already has a commltme.nt of $15,000 to the project from an individual in the community and $1,000 in working money donated tCJ Ten- nis Now by the high achoo! Associated Student Body. Working budget monies will be used for mailing expenses, ads and o t be r miscellaneous items needed in the cam- paign, Rosi said. At the request of district tnuteer, Ross will provide all malllngr, ads and other <fistrlbuted materlals to the board as hr fonnation. He will also provide monthly evaluations and progress reports every six months. The drive will tut two years and may be eztended lf 90 percent -or $'5,000 - of lbe original $50,000 is collected within that Ume. All pledges will be made to Tennis Now fwid of the Laguna Beach Educational FoundaUon and are tax deductible. Pledges will be collected when the $30,000 figure has been reached. From Pu11e 1 REAGAN ... Hoover as "a very great American who built an organizaUon that was the target of unfair and totally unjustified criticism. "No American ever displayed greater dedication tCJ duty or lived up to the finest ideals of public service than this giant of a man who directed the FBI for '8 years," Reagan said. "He was not tolerant of crime, violence or subversion and be was never taken in by the thousand masks that criminals and subversives wear In their constant e(fort to corrupt and destroy olU' system CJf 1overnment and jumice," Reagan said. NEW VICE CHANCELLOR UCl'a Huard Adami Hazard Adams Appointed UCI Vice Chancellor Dr. Hazard Adams, dflan of the school of humanities at UC I~ine, has been ap- pointed vice chancellor of academic al· fairs. Armouncement of the action by the UC Board of Regents was made jointly by UC President Charles J. llitch and UCI Chancellor Daniel G. AJdricb, Jr. Dr. Adams succeeds Dr. Rogger W. Russell who resigned to become chief ex· ecutive officer of Flinders University of South Australia earlier this spring. Dr. Adams. an expert on literary theory and 20th Century Anglo.Irish literature, joined the UCI faculty in 1964 and sfrved u founding chairman of the department of English for five years. He was named dean of humanities two and one.half years ago. Earlier, be had taught at Michigan State University, Cornell University, and the University of Texas. A graduate of Princeton University, he earned master of am and doctoral degrees at the University of Washington. He is the author of two novels, "The Truth About Dragons : An Anti-Romance" and "The Horses of Instruction," and several other books, including "Blake IDd Yeats: The Contrary Vision," "William Blake: A Reading Of the Shorter Poems,'' "The Contexts of Poetry" and "The Interests o( Criticism." The UCI Friends of the Library recently selected "The Truth about Dragons" as one of the outstanding books written by Orange County authors in 1971. Duo Net $2,000 In Pre-dawn Viejo Stickup A manhunt CCJntinues today for a pair or bandits who confronted a Mission Viejo restaurant manager at gunpoint Saturday and took $2,000 from the sale. Steve Powers, 23, of Huntington Beach, said the pair blindfolded him with tape and forced him back into the Jolly Ox after surprising him as be Jocked the restaurant's doors. Powers was closing Uli !he nightclub at La Paz and cabot roads during pr"'8wn hours when one of the gunmen confronted him: sherifrs deputies said. 'lite victim said be was herded across lhe parltlng lot to a oecond armed bandit before both pushed biJn buk into the Jolly Ox to get the evening's cash receipts. Siwnbling In wllb his eyes taped, Powers said he could only describe the first bandit as being a thin man, adding that both spoke in a midwestern twang. SAN JOSE CAPl _ The first delense witness took the vtitness stand today at the Angela Davis murder-kidnap-con· tipiracy trial and testifi~ thut the bl~ck militant was with her 1n San Francisco when the prosecution clnlms :she v.·as vlsltlng San Quentin PriS()n. Susan Castro a founder of the Soledad Brothers Defe~e Committee, said s~c lunched in San Francisco with Miss Davis on Aug. S, 1970. two days berore a bloody Marin county courthouse escape attempt in which four ptrsons died. Mrs. Castro, \Vhose testimony ended speculation that the defense woul~ rest without calling a single witness, said t_he luncheon took place at the home of Miss Davis' longtime friend Juanita 'Vhetler. After the luncheon, Mrs. Castro said she and lftW Davis drove to a San Fran- cisco apartment and met with Jonathan Jackson{ one of those who was killed t\\'O days la er. A San Quentin Prison guard bad testified for the prosecution that ~Hss Davis and Jonathan Jack!'.On came to the prison that afternoon, and that Jonathan. visited his older brother George, one of the so-called Soledad Brothers. The prosecution contends that Miss Davis, 28, bought four guns and helped Jonathan Jackson plot the escape at· tempt because she was in love with George Jackson and hoped to obtain his freedom. (See earlier story, Page 5). Students Seal Away 50 Years Fo~ .. Post.erity.., A time capsule containing the daily knick knack of 1925, 1954 and now 1971 will be nestled away in the base of tht . flagpole at the new Laguna Beach library, Student! of the Laguna Beach schools, who may well be the ones to chuckle and soort at the absurdities of today viewed 20 years hence, are invited to say what should be sealed in the capsule. The Friends of the Laguna Beach library have initiated a contest and are awarding books from local bookstores to the winners. First prize is $25 worth of books, second is $15, and third is $10. Jn addition to the items supplied by the stiidents, copies of the local newspapers. a history of the library since 1954 (date of the last addition to the time capsule, history or the friends of the library since 1954. and a hlst:ory of the chamber of commerce will be sealed in the box. When found during the razing of the: site for the new library, the box in the base of tbe old flag pole contained odd- ities of past eras. Dating from 1925 were: pictures of oilwells to be drilled in Laguna, pictures CJf the laying of a sewing line, official papers, some castor beans, menus from local restaurant!, a minstrel show pro- gram and ccpies CJf a Pacific Electric Rail line schedule. 1954.'s contributions, perhaps reflecting a more serious time, consisted. mostly of official papers and local newspapers. As for 1971, the students may eoch put one recoounendation in the suggestion boxes located at school libraries. Last day to submit recommendations is Fti- day. The directors of the Friends of tht Library will judge the suggestioru;. Election Corrected Debbie Van Deusen was elected Thurs. day to serve as the commissioner of publicity for the 1972-73 school year at Laguna Beocb Hlgh. A story whlch appeared in Friday's tdJ. tion of the Daily Pilot erroneously named Karen Jones as wiMer of the post. Beautifrd Diamond Rings at Big Savings ..... ,_..., ., ... LADIO $225 WIDOU•• AND HU .. Mlllff .... llT lil!'IW9 ·~ • Ill d , .......... -Mt .. ,.... $IM. U.DllS $185 W•DDIN• AllD tlfOAGIMllfT ..... SIT 1/J ct .... ._.. • Ill Miii• gotd. UOllS $165 WSDOIH MO .......... ..., .... 9ST C..ttr .... "'*"' ......,........ ..., • .,.,. ..... ,... ..... 1/1 ct • .., ... 1lfln. .... UDllS $155 WIDDl!fe AlfO IM-=::WllT llH In C.llt ....... • ... ·~ .,. ll .............. Tftll" t.t. -lilt,,..._,.... .... .... ... ~••c• 5110 575 555 s50 1014 ucm OUR MOST UNUSUAL DIAMOND GUARANTEE $275 5135 •100 ................. awf ..... c.n1tr .,__, Ill rt. _,. 1 """" ,...,.... ..., .._ A d. ............... e When you bvy • di• ::;..:::.=::.i=:.-----------------J,,,.nc1 from ut we will Choose,,_ oftl' 125 weddllMJ ""9 sets. Aho lawte M11ctlow -:;;,.AIMESA JEWELRY & LOAN • ) guor•nlM INI diamond I 40% MORI tr,.. you Id w It or ,...,, "*'"Y ll>ldt. Con ,..., clo •a Wiii -hero? COMPARIL ' I Ii 17 • I (I 17 • Saddlehaek VOL 65, NO. 143, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES . . . • -----.. ' ORAN GE COUNTY, CAU_FORNIA - T oday's F lnal N.Y. Stoeks MON DAY, MAY 22, 19n TEN CENTS Reagan Calls for Vote on Death Penalty Ban By TOM BARLEY 01 lh• 0•11• 1'1111 il•tf Gov. Ronald Reagan today in Anaheim urged "every Californian wit h a con· scieqce" to sign a petition that would put the restoration of capital punishment in- itiative on the ballot in November, Reagan told the annual meeting of the Caillornia Police Officers Association in Disneyland Hotel that "the state owes you the fullest protection in a duty that daily becomes more hazardous . • "I see that US lawmen were killed ln the llne of duty in this country Jest year. Twenty-three lawmen .and correctional officers have died in California since January, 1971," Reagan said. "One is too many," Reagan declared to the cheers of the standing lawmen. "I want a mandatory first degree murder trlal for anyone who kills a police officer," the governor said. "A bill to thi s efrect has passed the state Senate and is now before the Assembly and I urge the IXOll l' oting Stand Hinshaw Blasts Schmitz Record By PAMELA HALLAN Ot flit 01llY r 111t Sl11f Andrew J . Hinshaw , a candidate for lhe 39th Congressional District seat .he ... by Rep . John Schmitz (R·Tustin), tOday charged his opponent \\i\h abandoning the Republican Party and President Nix· on as well. Addressing a group of students at NEW VICE CHANCELLOR UCl 's Haxard Adams Hazard Adams Appointed UCI Vice Chancellor Mission Viejo High School this morning. Hinshaw , incumbent Orange CoW\ty fax assessor, questioned his o~ponent's in- tegrity and ability to IJ!Prestnt 'the citizens in his district. "Any elected official should have honesty, integrity and sb<aJ]d say what he meaM, despite the p o 1 it i c a I con- sequence!, without double-talk," Hinshaw said. J "He should kl!8'w lbe bills allecting bis district and represent: the views of his: constituents despite hi! own personal views," Hinshaw continued. 11He claims to be a Republican, yet he has abandoned the Republican •party," Hinshaw asserted. He cited Schmitz' voting record which he said showed him voting against the Republi can Party and President Nixon 51 percent of the time; again!t general Republican principles 60 percent of the time and against President Nixon 85 per- cent or the time. "You cannot have a man in politics who consistently votes against his party,'' Hinshaw said. "He likes to proclaim him.sell a strong defender of the military. 1bat's fine, but does he vote that way? ... No." Hinshaw said that on April 2', a bill came up for & vote which would increase pay for military men and increase retir~ ment benefits for military personnel, Hinshaw said Schmitz cast a no vote on that measure. He also cited Schmitz' claim or being strongly against drug abuse, set Hin.\haw claimed Schmitz Wall one of two representatives to vote against a bill which would increase money for in- stltutiom trying to help the narcotic ad- dict. "Schmitz should not engage in so much doubl e-talk." he said. "Orange County is comidered the most conservative of Republican are.as with a Dr. Haiard Adams. dean of the school national repuation for being a bit kooky of humanities at uc Irvine, has been ap-~fu:~haps that is because of John pointed vice chancellor of academic af. "This county carried califomia for fa~ment or the action by the UC President Nixon during the la.st election," Board of Regents was made jointly by he emphasized. UC President Charles J. Hitch and UCI Yet Hinshaw charged Schmitz has been Chancellor Daniel G. Aldrich, Jr. support ing fellow _!l<Pc John Aah~i ol Dr. Ada1M-sucteed• Dr~Rogger w. -Ohl<rWhOIJWOrimg to unseat Piei1aeiil RU!sell who resigned, to becom~ chl~f ex· Nixon, Hinshaw said. , ecutive officer of f!mdez:s Un~versity of T.he county official told a small group South Australia earher this spring.. af students that be has more to offer than Dr. Adams. an expert on hter~ry hi.s opponent. theory afl<! . 20th Century Angl.o-lrish Hinshaw sald he knows the county bet· literature. )Orned the. UCJ fa.culty rn f 1964 ter than any otber single individual and is and served as fou~1ng cha.uman ° the close to its people and its problems. department of English for f~v.e years. He Hinshaw pledged to bring expertise in was named dean of humanities two and the area of financing to Congress. one-half years ago. . . Hinshaw also pointed to the county's high Earlier, he had taught ~t ~ichig~ rate of unemployment aod e.mphastxed State Unive~ity. Cornell Uruversity, 8 f that congressmen are ill a position to tn. the University of Texas. A graduate o P · lo u · s'ty he earned master flucnce the l~tion or govtmm~t con-rltlce n ruver 1 • tracts of srts and doctoral degrees at tlo• He ;.Id he bu traveled lo Washington University of Washinglon. .. and found that "Schrnllz bu no n rt He is the author of two ~vWRo • ~ with aovmiment officials" andppotbi.s Truth About Dragom: An Anti· ma~ hurt , ' and "Th< Horses of Instruction," and would the eoonty I chances of I ther books including "Blake and rectlvlng any government contnct1. .;ev~~ ~ Contr.cy Vision," 11Wllllam During a question and answtt aession Bl':k : A Reading o1 the Sborter Poems," lllnahaw told lludenll: ~-contexts of Poetry" and ''Tbe -lie IUpporls Pmldat Nlloa'1 Viet• Jnter .. ts of Criticism." 111111 pollcles. Tiie UC! Friends of the LibrllY -11• supports the .,... and 'prl .. tcn-.....,uy oelocted "Th< Truth about !Joi lnlll111ted b)' the N I • o o Dragons" as one of the outstanding boon Adminllltil!On bee .... of lollat1m. wrlttco by ·0range County outhora ID -He -Jhat Norton Simon bu 117~ c:oatrtl>Dl<d lo bi> Cl!llpolp. t ' • support of every Californian for this vital measure." Reagan told more than 500 top California lawmen that the s l a t e Supreme Court threw out more than 200 years af legal precedent when it dumped the death penalty earlier this year. "It reversed its own decision on the same case four years ago and did oothing by its very act to restore any standing it ever. had with the people of California," Reagan said. The governor said another top priority of Californian.! "both in terms of pro- tecting the public and easing the burden on lawmen" was a long overdue crackdown on pushers and dealers in drugs and narcotics. "Moro than 99,000 adults and 36,000 minors were arnsted for drug offenses in 1970," Reagan said, "More than 1,000 deatha in Los Angeles County arone were caused in that year by drug addiction." Reagan called for a "stiff upward revision" or the jail term meted out to drug dealers and public support for what he called "a new and comprehensive drug abuse treatment program ... that will divert the fir st time user or possessor of drugs away from our jails and prisons." Reagan said participants in the unique program will be given the opportunity "lo share in treatment programs designed to keep them from becoming addicted and restore them to a normal productive • • '' ·UPI Tl ..... PRESIDENT NIXON' AND· SOVIET PRESIDENT PODGORNY ILEl'TI IN MOSCOW Light h\oment•Shir'9d After President's Arrlv1l .1t Vftukovo II Airport First Defense Witness Recount,s Davis Lunch · SAN JOSE (AP) -Tbe firs! defense witness took the witness stand today at the Angela Davis murder-kidna~ spiracy trial and testified that the black militant was with her in San Francisco when the prosecution claillll ahe was visiting San Quentin Prison. Susan Castro, a fowlder or the Soledad Brothers Defense Committee, said she lunched in San Francisco with MW Davis on Aug. 5, 1970, two days before a bloody Marin County cow1bouse escape attempt in which four persons died: Mrs.· Castro, wbooe testimony ended speeulatlon· that the defense would rest wilbout calling a ~ witness, aalcl the IWl<heon look place at the home of Mias Davis' longtime friend Juanita Wheeler. After the luncheon, Mrs. Castro said she and Miss Davis drove to a San Fran- cisco apart.Jnftrt and met with Jonathan Jackson, one of those who was killed two days later. A San Quentin Prison guard had testified for the prosecution that Miss Davis and Jonathan Jackson came to the prison that afternoon, and that Jonathan visited hia older brother George, one of the 1C><:alled Soledad Brothers. Th< prosecution eontend! tbat Mias Davis, 28, bought four guns and helped Jonathan Jactlon plot the escape at- tempt becauJe ahe was in love with Georg• Jac:Uon and hoped lo obtain bi> freedom. (Seo tarller story, Page 5). -Pulic-e-R:-epel-Protesters In Melee at Pentagon WASHINGTON (AP) -Demonstrators attempted to enter the Pentagon todly, shortly aHer their legal pmnll·lo dem- omtrate expired but were rtpUlsed by polie<. About 100 building guards pushed badt the bead of the ragged. column of pro- testers and began mUlna amsts. Among those taken into custod"y were an- tiwar leaders Davld Dellinger and Fathtr James GroppL (See earlier 1tory, Page l ) . At first there WU little violence .. JllardS blocked the f°"'onl push and began bauli1(, oil dlmonstralon one by -· Bu~ u ihe ellort continued, guards were aeen dragging aome demonstrators lo • wa!t!nfcblls by thebalr. Pot1ce Ald more Ihm 2GO demonstra- lon were arrattd. Ltad<n of lhe -trattoo Ullng • mega~ Rp<al<dly urged the crowd to move forward "gently a n d pmlllenUy" and not 1ttempt lo alorm the bulldlng. Only a fraction of the group tried tO enter Ifie bulldlng, Tiiey were 1topped In the middle of !he 11r .. 1 outside. Anoth<r pp ut down In the stmt, wh1le still «hers stood aside and watched. A few rocb wa-e thrown from the crvwd in •tile dlrect1on of gUlll'<ls and ..,...,.. -me on tllt Pentqon steps. OUlllde Ille iluull.-,two Vldnam Vettram Ag-the War born<d • greon onny coat and ·a ...--umy lhtt lo the chetn of the CIVWd. "Thtt'1 four ,._, of my !Ue Coi•I up tn ~., G:Je'O:tbem.u\d u the crowd ut on • nw:adam porldog lol oulalde the building. Duo Net $2,000 In Pre-dawn Viejo Stickup A manh unt continue! today for I pair of bandits who confronted a Minion Viejo restaurant manager at gunpoint Saturday and took $2,000 from the safe. Steve Powers. 23, of Huntington Beach, said the pair blindfolded him with tape and forced him back: into the Jolly Ox after surprising him as he Jocked the restaurant's doors. Powers was closing up the nightclub at La Paz and Cabot roads during predawn hours when one of the gumnen confronted him , sherifra deputies said. The victim said he was: herded across lhe parking lot to a second armed bandit before both pushed him back into the Jolly Ox to get the evening's cash receipts. Stwnbling in with his eyes taped, Powers said he cou1d only describe. the fint-bmd1t as being-1 thln man, adding that both spoke In a midwestern twang. Angola Airplarw Crru li Kills 20 LOB!TO, Angola (UPI) -Twenty persoM wert killed when the pUot of an Angola Airlines twin-engine turboprop airliner overshot tbe runway 1t Lobito airport tn dense fog and crashed into the aea, the airline announced. The F%7 Fri<ndship plane, eorrylng 19 passengen and fDW' crtwmm -all Portuguese -wu on a schfduh!tl morn- ing flight &mday from Luanda Jo Sa Da Bandeiro in South Aoeola with Its lirst stop In Loblto when the eruh occurred, the Portuguese otwa qency AN! 111d. Algeria Has Visitor ALGIERS, Algert. (AP) -Presidenl llablb llourpiba ol TUllisia arrived btl9 loda1 for a .... t·1 olllclal vialL place in society.'' Reaga n said he particularly welcomed what will be "the massive use of citizen vol un teers to help meet a mounting social prob lem. ''\Ve hope that we can reach the poten- tia l young addict far more effectivel}' than any institutional rehabilltatlon p~ gram ," Re aga n said. Re agan drew cheers from hi s audienCf! when he lauded the late J. Edgar (See REAGAN, Page II At Dinner Rec~ption In Moscow MOSCOW {UPI) -President Nixon told Kremlin leaders tonight they together can make peaceful cooperation a reality during their summlt talks thiJ week. "Because we are both prepared to pro- ceed on the basis of equality and mutool respect, we met:t a moment when we can make peaceful cooperation a reality/' Nixon said. The President made the statement in 1 toast tonight .at a Javish state dinner in honor of him1 Mrs. Nl1on and bis ol1lclal '• parlj' lour l10Urll alter his anival ID Moscow for a week of. IWllmit talks. The arrival reception was friendly but restrained. Crowds, largely silent, watched a motorcade on the 17-mlle trlp from Vnukovo Airport to the Grand Kremlln Palace, where the dinMr aJ&o wa.s held. , Nixon's plane arrived five minutes ahead of the scheduled 4 p.m. landing, The weather was humid, the !Ides gray. The Soviet offlcials were animatedly friendly for thls first visit in peacetime to Russia by a U.S. President. It was late afternoon when the Presi- dent arrived, and he, Mrs. Nixon and other members of the official U.S. party were guests at the lavish dinne.r by their hosts in the Hall of Facets of the Grand Kremlin Palace where the Nixons ar1 staying. His face-to-face talk.s with BrezhneY and the other Sovleta begin Tuesday morning. In !tis dinner toast, Nixon said the eyes of the world are focu5ed on the posalbillty of a Soviet-American agreement to Jimjt strategic nuclear arms. "An agreement In this area could begin to tum · our countries away from a wasteful and dangerous arms race and toward more production for peace," he aaid . An hour after his arrival In Moscow Nixon slipped into a Kreni.lin office and spent 4$ minutes alone.-except for two translators -with Leonld J. Brezhnev, secretary general of the Soviet Com- !DUnist party, the ackoowledged Soviet leader, Russian sources told UPI cor- respondent Henry Shapiro. Reporters accompanying the Nixons estimated the crowds en route to the Kremlin from the airport at about 100,000 -falrly small by Moocow stand- ards for a major visiting foreign dig- nitary. Nixon said before leaving saizburg, (See NIXON, P11e Z) 0r .. ge Weatlaer ltfore IUll!hine on the agenda for Tuesday with continued warm temperatures. Hlghs at the beaches 62 rising to 72 in the inland areas. Low1 48-53. INSIDE TOD-' 1' The Costa Me1a Civic Play- h o u 1 t and the Huntinaton Beach Plowhouse both opened their Jea.Jon-ciosina productiom ovtr lht wtektnd. Both are rt· vieweO: toda11. Set Enterta in- ment, Paat• J 8· 19. ' .. • ..... B : ,.,...,,.. , .. ,, " .............. or.et '"'*" ,. lytrN ,..,,.,. lt -.... ... Mlf\:tlt l .. lt ,......... ., """'" "''' -., --. ._.. """ P.11 --. ' •• -- )': 2 DAIL> PILOT IS ''"X d M . "' -rate ovie " ' 1; Was Bad Scene Enemy River ) • ATHENS. Ga. (UPI) -Watching 11 X·nted movie has cost two policemen aix~month suspensions. Heavy Fighting R'eport,ed North of Hue Son Tickled, And Wallace's Toes Wiggle SILVER SPRING, Md. (UPtl -Do<· tors reported today that George C. Wallace's toes ha ve shown irl\•olunlar1 activity and an aide said that \VaUace's 600 tickled his father 's feet •·and hi$ toes moved." Assist.ant Police Chief Clarence b Schuttz told the Atht:ns Civil Serv- ' ice Commission that he searched ' for officers Dtivid Hansen and Jimmy Means in the dovlnto1vn ' area for over 30 minutes the nlght of May ! without finding them. Schultz said he then v.·ent lo the Paris Adult Theatr e, a movie houst raided in recent months on obscenity chatge3, and found the pair leaning against the back wall watching an X-rated lilm. The officers said they entered the thea ter to make a "routine check." • 2 Die of Auto Injuries; Total For County 97 A housewife and a young man have lost two and six-week fights for life, becoming the·~sth and 96th traffic accident fatalities of the current year in Orange County. Victims were identified as Mn. Lor· -ialne Baker, of 12691 Trask Ave., Garden Grove and Terry Sears, 20, of Fullerton. ' Sears was injured six weeks ago when his car swerved and spun off Tonne~ Can· ·yon Road neai the Orange Freeway ··overpass and overturned. He succumbed Friday at St. Jude Hospital in Fullerton. while Mrs. Baker died at St. Joseph's Hospital in Orange .the same day from her injuries. .: She was 1tanding in her froot yard two Weeks ago when a four-whee l trailer :broke loose from a trtJck, careened over ~ cur~ and ran her ~own. ' Investigators said a hitch and saret1 .Chain · eonnecting the trailer and truck driven by Thomas W. Moore, 33, of 1756 Sherry Lane, Santa Ana, broke and ·caused the accident. .. Ex-Black Power '.:Leader Charged . PORT OF SAPIN, Trinidad (UPI) - Former London Black Power leader ' Michael Abdul Malik and two other men have ~ ordered to stand trial for the • murder of a local barber named Joe -Skerritt Accused wlih Malik, also known as w Michael X. were two olher Trinidadians, ., Stanley Abbott and Samuel Browne. r Skerritt's body and that of English socialite Gale Ann Benson were dug up from shallow graves near the hom,e Malik rented in Arim, East Trinidad, last February. Miss Benson was the daughter of former British Member of Parliament Capt. Leonard Plugge. SAIGON (UP!) -North Vletnam- us!ng PTT! ampblbJOUI tanb IWann.d 11crOS! the 1'ty Chanh River defense line 22 miles north of Hue today in an ap- parent effort to e!tabllih a bridgehead. Heavy fighting "'as reported in the area at nightfall. The North Vietnamese probing attack, the second in two days, was believed hall~ by lnteme naval bombardment from U.S. 7th Flett ships off the coast, by Allied air strike that cost an F4 Phan~ tom jet, and by Allied artillery. A South Vietnamese spokernsan in Saigon said tonight the North Vietnamese had been driven back across the river by n1ghtfall, but reports from the area Itself wefe unclear. U.S. advisers said they thought today's attacks were a "probe or reconnals!ance in force" rather than an all-out move against Hue. The North Vletnames' Increased their pressure 12 miles west of Hue and car· rled out ahlrp 11W:b near Kontum In the Central Hlgblllll<la, al An Loe !O mlla north of Saigon, and in the Mekong Delta. South Vietnamese put Com.mwlist losses in !hose actions at 937 men. in· eluding 23 tanks on the .Hue defense peri1neler .. Hanoi Radio reported more intense U.S. air strikes against North Vietnam today and said U.S. Navy planes on Sun· day resumed m.Jnlng of Haiphong Harbor. There was no confirmation of the reports by lhe U.S. command but the Pentagon has made it clear in public statements it is the U.S. intent to keep Haiphong Harbor inoperable. The command did say it withdrew 600 American semcemen from Vietnam last week, but another 400 Marine !tiers entered the war zone. The net withdrawal of 200 Americans was the smallest since the Jast week of January, 1971, when there were no pullouts. It left U.S. troop strength ill Kleindienst Foresees Organized Crime's End Crediting electronic s u r v e i J 1 a n c e techniques as the answer, Acting U.S. At- torney General Richard Kleindienst today predicted that America will cripple and totally control organized crime within three to four years. He did not mention any 1pecific ethnte groups or individuals. but· left little doubt in his references during the california Peace Officers' Association convention apeech at the Disneyland Hotel. "A handful of calloo1, evit, avariciou1 men who think notltjng pf murder, ex· tortlon, and perjury have become a grow .. ing malignancy in American society/' he declared . "But measures pressed by this Administration among which electronic surveillance figures prominently have put 1,600 of these top crime figures out of busines.s," Kleindienst charged. "We have eliminated half of the leadership of 1the families' and it is my prediction that in three to four years we , will have this cancer completely under our control," he added. Kletncllenst said be differed with Governor Reagan's earlier appeal for the restoration of the death penalty "in the sense that I believe we can only have limited capital punishment whether Jt be in California or anywhere else. ''By that I mean the death penaJty for poliUcaJ assassination, the killing of an on duty police officer and the majority of premeditated murder," Kleindle.nst said. "I don't believe and I never have that we ea.n include crimes of passion in the category advocated today by Gov . Reagan/' the acting federal attorney general said. Kleindienrt predicted the d e c 1 i n e "within a very few years" of the drug problems "that have achieved such tremendous proportions in our society ~ day. "It is my belief that the Vietnam War which has so distressed the youth of our na\ion has been a prime fa cto r in so m1'ly young people turning to drugs 11 an escape," Kleindienst said. He blamed "a nation that sent 500,000 young men who were never told why they were there 8,000 mUes to fight a war while the people at home were told that that war didn't exist." But Kleindienst felt that the 11intvitable solution" of that war will usher in an era . in which young people will turn from drugs with the recognition that "they hav~ become one of the gte~test evils in our society." From Pagel NIXON .•• Austria, where be made a 36-hour rest stop In a fairyland castle atmosphere, that be expected the summit talks to be "the most intensive . • . I have ever participated in on substantive matters." But there were indicati ons the talks might not produce the immediate aeeord on anns control that had been eq>ected. The ride lo the Kremlin from the airport took about 31 minutes. Closer to the heart of Moscow, the sidewalk crowds were three or four persona deep. They appeared friendly but were sUent. At the palace where be is staying In Moscow, Nixon accepted a small glass of cognac along with other American leaders as their Russian host! toasted Nixon's health. Experimental Airplane Crash J(ills Coast Man 'The Nixon arrival was seen live on both American and Soviet television. The Amelcan television networks picked up the Russian TV pictures and interposed their own commentaries. Tass, the official Soviet news agency. also gave unusually fast treatment to the arrival. Tass commented , "It is difficult to overestimate the significance of this visit.'' Moscow television devoted 25 minutes to the live arrival ceremonies. A Dana Point man and his flying com· panio n were killed Sunday when their ex· perimentaJ, hand-built biplane lost power and crashed into the desert west of Vi~ torvllle. San Bernardino County S h e r I ( f ' s deputies said Floyd Eugene Robinette, 36, of 25222 Brigantine Drive, Dana Point, • and Jatnes Herbert Richter, 46, of :. PoTMna, were pronounced dead at. the scene at the 9 a.m. crash at the west end :· of El Mirage Dry Lake. fl.fr. Robinette was employed as an engineer with TRW Systems, Inc., and was a qu1i!ified commcrc.ial pilot. He is OU.NII COAST IS DAILY PILOT Tiie Or'<1gt Co.iii OAIL Y PILOT. w;ttl """'~ ;, (Ombl"ed Ille NeWJ..Prns, 11 Cll.lb!l.n.J llY ft>• Oru19e Coe•! Publl111i119 Comp,1ny. Sept· ·~tt fldi1;11r11 ••• pUb11Jfl.td, Mono•v 111n11,11111 F'tkJlf, IOr CM!e M111, N"'llO•I B11d1, Hunlil!g!Ollo B~"clllF~ni.111 V1ltt'(, l1011n1 '"cll, lrvfoi,1Seo:ldltb.lck 9lld Se11 Ctemenrt/ Sit! J~n C1piJI''"°' A Jl!'l(lll '90lon1J "''''°" il Wblllhff S.lu•cl•'ti ind ~1mcllyi.. t~ orlntf0.11 PUtittlfllllt PltM il 1tl llG Voit &•I' Strtrt, Co•I• Mui, C~l!!orni., tlf>ll. lto\te1I N. W1t4 1'1ttlcltnl 11'1d P'llbliihd J 1ck R. Curley Viel Pthicltftl Ind GtMr•l Mll'lt!llf Thome• Kee.-il Eclllol' 11101'11•1 A. M11rphin t M51'1101"9 Etl!cr Ch•1f11 H. Looi RicJ.1rd '· Nill Aul1t•n1 M•Mlllnl Eclltors Offk .. CO.II Mm: m We11 B•Y Strief Nr'IJCIOtf leKl'I: aw NIWl)O(j loultY•nl l'f\11'11 leKh; tt2 F_,,t A- Mwnt11191>0n B••tll: 11e1s , .. (I\ IOvltYtfl S.ft C"llmtflt1: JOJ Horlfl fl C.mlno-R••I fol ..... 17141 '42 .. lll Cl•lfW .. ...., .. '42·1•7• $n a.-... Al D1,1•l•.lh: Ttto,low 411 ... U Cwrtftlht. 1m. cn..e en.a Nlllllllnt ~. ... """ •llflts. h1r11• efl"'W Nn.r 0#" "'4ffiMtNll• MBln "'*' .. .... ... " wlHIOlll ...,., ..... ...... ctnfMN ...... . ... ~ ,....,.. ...... Cftl• ~. C.O~il. l4llillell11:1M ., urrltf" P.d ~-l .. """' ..,.,, "*"~' "'"'""' ••• , ....... tl.&I ~- survived by his wife, Reba, and two childre n. Funeral arrangements are pen· ding at Sheffer Mortuary in San Clemente. Sheriff's deputies said the two men had taken off in the open-cockpil aircraft and v;ere testing lt to obtain Federal Av iation Administration clearance to operate it from commercial air fields. Several hund red specta tors watched the airplane lose power at about 60 feet and plunge straight into the desert. The men were attending a flying meet of the Independent Protective Order of Taildraggers when the crash occurred . The flying associatio n is made up of owners of the older type airplanes with a st.rut rather than a wheel as a tail lan- ding gear. There were a few smiles but no tradi- tional bearhugs of. greeting !or NL-.:od f'rom Kremlin leaders. Premier Alexie Kosygin, hardley a smiler at the ~t of times, offered his hand to Nixon. Mrs. Nixon took into bolh arms a bouquet ot red flowers. Diplomats noted the absence at the airport of Brezhnev, the leader jud~ed more equal than his equals on the Soviet Union's 15-man ruling Politburo. He had generally been expected to be present. About 200 Russian workers , bused to the airport, dutifully waved U.S. flags but did not shout or smile. The first ta1ks between Nixon S1nd Brezhnev were plaMed at l a.m. PDT Tuesday. Mrs. Nixon's Tuesday schedule -:alled for a visit to a secondary school, a ride on the }rfoscow subway and a tea. Court Okays Conviction In Less Than Full Vote WASHING TON (UPI) -The Supreme Court in a M vote held today that a state may permit convictions In criminal cases by Jes,, lhan a unanimous vote or the 12- m11n juries. The decision came tn cases' from Louisiana and Oregon. U n a n l m o u s verdicts are required ln federal courts and most other statts. Under Oregon's constitution, 10 of 12 jurors may rtturn a vtrdlct of guilty ex· cept in murder cases. The Louisiana practice under both law and the llate constltutlon allows con- viction by nine of 12 jurors, except when the defendant could be sentenced to death In addition. Unan!mlty Is required In less serious .,.... lrled by llv .. man jurits. TtxaS, Montana, Idaho and Oklahoma a.How Jess than wwdmous verdicts ror minor ortensu. In anotbu ta5t IOCS.y. tho court uphold the const1tutiooality of federal and Jtate Immunity Ja., lised lo require a wliness to ,.tVit evidence or fnce jail fr ·· r ·11· t---.. 1'-.. ,. ..... -.... ,. .... ···-·· .. ; \veapon In the wor on organized crime. The 5-2 ruling came in te:sl cases challenging the immunity provision of the 1970 federal crime control 11w and New Jersey's state statute along the same lines. They are used when a witoeas resorts to the Fifth Amendment claim that his testimony mJaht Incriminate him. Tb• Immunity decision deal! with two types of exemption from prosecution. One ls known u "use" tmmunJty. This prom!w lhlt a wllhtsa wl!hlOt be P!'OI' ecuted for anylhtng be 1111 In his own testimony or any evidence of a aune deriving directly from It. But It doe1 not uanpt him from P!'OI' tottlon If i..tlmony by oilier wlb- ., 8'parate evldt!tce llnb him to 1 crime. The olh<r, much -er type Is toown lo laW)'tl'I as ''traollCUonal" lmmmJtt)'. Thll provldOI he can oever be pr<llOCUted !or 111y crime Involved In hll lflttbnon1. Tbe """" upheld ''woe" Jnummll7 In 1 ~ -.. y's two decisions . • V1'biam 1t ll,800 u of Tbu-y. President Nixon ordered American strength dropped to btlow 49,000 by Jwie 30. An average of more than 2,600 U.S. troops must be pulled out each week to meet that deadline. Since the command issued its weekly strength report. another 7770 Marine airmen have betn added to the Vietnam rolls:, military sources sald. One Soulb Vietnamese victory was rt:pcr1.ed -In Binh Dinh Province in the coastal highlands near Qui Nhon. Government troops there recaptured Combat Base Salem Sunday without ma· jor opposition. lt was the southernmost Communist position in that province where they control most of the northern portion. Dispatches from Hue said the Com# munists, using a large number of the Soviet-buHt PT76 tanks, cross the 1.1y Chanb River about a half mile south of the Van Trinh l3ridge, three milts in from the seacoast. Allied sources sald there was heavy fighting. All of the area -as was Quang Tri to the north -is in range of U.S. 7th Fleet destroyers and cruisers equipped with missiles and 5. &.and S.inch shells. AJlled officials said it seemed possible the Communists were trying to establish a bridgehead across the river in prepara· lion for the ·assault on Hue but that today's strikes were not accompanied by {he normal heavy artillery barrages used in previous assaults. They said only four to six rounds of 130MM artillery fell in that area today. Field reports said Communist artillery did shoot down an American F4 Phantom jet but that the pilot and radar man aboard parachuted into Soulb Vietnamese marine positions and were picked up by a U.S. Air Force rescue helicopter. Chino Hills Area Eyed as Open· Space Preserve Thi.rd District County S u p e r v i s o r William J. Phillips today proposed the establlshment of an open space preserve in the Chino Hills area north of Yorba Linda and wt of Brea. Phillips bas reseived time at 10 a.m, Tuesday on the l3oard of &Jpervlsors agenda to present his plan for a feasibili· ty study of the proposed open space proj- ect which would involv~ up to 17,000 acres. The property In quest.ion includes 2.500 acres emnarked for the propiioed Chino Hills Regional Airport which Pltllllpa 11id should not be glven further consideration by the county. Friday, hundreds of letters were mailed to Phillips' constltutents In the Tblrd District eip!alnng the proposal. The supervisor sald today the project would involve land in Riverside and San Bernardino counties as well as Orange County and is localed roughly belwttn Brea and Yorba Linda and Corona and Chino. Phillips said in the letter that his pro. posal was an answer to a r'ecom· mendaton by the Yorba Linda City Coun· cU. Councilmen pointed out that there are no plat15 for a wilderness park in northeastern Orange County at this time. The Federal Aviation Administration has called for written comments on a modified plan for the Chino Hills airport. PhilliP6 has asked the FAA to schedule another public hearing to be held in the Third District on the airport. A hearing was held Feb. 3 in Placentia end the airport project wu vigorously opposed by residents and officials of Yorba Linda, Brea, Placentia and Fullerton. Since then bac~ers of the airport proj- ject have reduced the 11ize in hope! of dampening the opposition and to conform to FAA regulations on use of air spa et in the Los Angeles Basin. Chief Injured Washington Police Chief Jerry Wilson, with blood running down side of face, issues or- ders during an antiwar demon- stration in Washington. Wilson suffered a fa cial cut from rock during confrontation. See story Page 4. Pink B11s to Aid In Registration For Summer Plan Registration for the Irvine summer recreation program will be held June 3 with officials aboard the Pink Bus traveling throughout the city seeking signups of adults and chidldren for the June 19 to Aug. 11 array of activities. Ad hoc committee Chairman Sharon Sircello of University Park said today scholarship fund~ are. still being sought following the Renaissance Faire fund rais ing effort in which $60 was raised. The donations will help youngsters enroll in a variety of cultural work shops. }rfany of the Irvine swnmer programs are sell.supporting and require payment of modest fees for participation. Howvever, the bulk of the programs, including free daily bus service from North Irvine to the beach will be included in the one-time registration fee. Mrs. Sircello noted that North Irvine families whose children will begin the 45* 15 all year school program on July IO. "can participate in the 'dr~in' portion of the program during their va cation periods." Further, the all-year school pupils may participate in the city programs from June 19 to July JO. Other programs, such as gymnastics and dance, she noted, will be scheduled during after achoo! hours. Paul Brad y, assistant city manager, said today an informational brochure is being prepared by city staff detailing the entire summer recreation package. That will be available from city hall arter June 1. The Irvine summer recreation program was establishe:i at the direction of the ci· ty council. It was developed by the ad hoc citizens advisory committee chaired by Mrs. Sircello. Onassis, Jackie Visiting Tehran TEHRAN (AP ) -Greek shipping magnate Aristotle Onassis and his wife Jacquellne have arrived here for a week of sightseeing that will include trips to Isfahan, Shiraz and the ruins of Persepolls. Onassis and his wile were greeted on arrival by jet Sunday by Reza Fallah, an executive of the National Iranian Oil Co. • The doctors said the development was 11most encouraging." But they said it was stlll diUicult to ascertain whether \V atlace will recover from the paralysis inflicted by a \\1ould·be assassin's bullets last fo.1onda y afternoon. "Over the past 18 hours there has been some return of involuntary n1uscular ac· tivity to the toes of both feet.'' said a medical bulletin from doctors at Hol1 Cross Hospital. .. Gov. Wallace exhibits normal reflet reaction when the sole of his foot is stimulated," the bulletin said. "There is also encouraging evidence of increasing sensations down to the level of the· mid-thigh. The significance of these finding as regards to the final de~ree of recovery froln his paralysis is difficult to ascertain at this time but is most en· couraging." Elvin Stanton, assistant press secretary to the wOunded Alabama governor. said Wallace's son, George Jr., 20. visited hi!I father Sunday night and burst into Wallace's staff room after the visit, shouting : "I tickled his foot and his toes moved. Then 1 held up sheet so he could see ii.'' Stanton said the younger \Val\ace in· dicated the governor was pleased with the new development. Billy Joe Camp, \Vallace's press secretary, issued a statement from Cornelia Wallace, the governor's wife "I'm not surprised," she said of ihe new development. "I was most optimistic all along and I thank the people of this country for their prayers and I hope they will continue to pray for my husband." · Camp said tha t despite the doclors• uncertainly·about whether Wallace would recover from paralysis, "this is the be8inning of mov~ment we were all hop- ing for." ' Vice President and Mrs. Spiro T. Agnew visited \VaJlace at the hospital this morning. President Nixon visi ted him Friday. the day before leaving for ?i.1oscow. Agnew said after his visit that Wallace ''looked extremely V.'ell." "The governor is very alert and talking a lot about politics," Agnew told reporters. . "I ~ngratulated him for his primary victories last week in Maryland and Michigan.'' The vice president said he did not discuss with Wallace the governor's im· proved condition. But Agnew said of Wallace: 'He's going to fight this thing and come out of it all right. I honesUy thought he looked extremely welL He was alert and seemed cheerful." From Pagel REAGAN •.. Hoover as "a very great American who built an organization that was the target of unfair and totally unjustified criticism. "No American ever displayed greater dedication to duty or lived up to the finest ideals of public service than this giant of a man who directed the FBI for 48 years," Reagan said, "He was not tolerant of crime, violence or subversion and he was never taken in by the thousand masks that criminals and subversives wear Jn their constant effort to corrupt and destroy our !ystem of government and justice," Reagan said. Modesty Costs Her ROCHDALE, England (UPI) -A magistrates court fined Ma v i s McCormick $2.61 for refusing to give her age to a policeman who stopped her for speeding. Beautiful Diamond Rings at Big Savings •tt•I ,_.., ••• UDIU .... ~IUCI •IDDIN• AND IM•A•IMINT llN• llT $225 $110 .. ,...,. llyle -Iii ct. lf5-mond • Ml M ,..iiew 9l)ld. I.ADii.i $185 $75 WIDDtMe AND IMeAe•MIWT •IMe fU liJ Cl, cll1mond • In wrilM fQll, LADlll $165 '55 WIDDIMf AffD IMeA•tMINT ltlfte 111' C.-nMr t1l11M111t ._,,,_....,. .., a tlNU lfl•'""'" tt11I t/a cf, Stl In """I'-..... UDl•I $155 s50 wt:DOINe MID .,. .... Ml'llf ..... fft Cfllter tll•IMIW • dlfl,_.,. ~ .,.. 11 t1'Nll tllflnllfll!f.. lflll w. ct .• In yelllw .-. LADlll $275 '135 WIODI;.= IN•AelMINT l:INe c;..IM" . J/I d, W!lll. I -II .,,... "'91 "'-A d .1111 ......... ChoaM fram over 125 weclcll119 ring sets. Also lal'IJ• Mlection of IOlltalres. COSTA MUA JiWELRY & LOAN . 11"4 F'im al IM l'Mn PIGa 14 Shey 18,1 NEWPORT ILVD.. PHONE 646-7741 DOWNTOWN· COSTA MESA-It'""• H..._ I ~dooy DOM ucm OUR MOST UNUSUAL DIAMOND · GUARANTEE • Whtn you buy 1 ell• mond from VI we wlll guarantM that diamond ti ~% MOR! thtn you ptld lo< It or your money bock. Ctn you do ., woll tl1twhert? COMPARI. ; I 17 ) • 17 J • ,_ ... ---. --· .. 1--------~ . I Huntington Bea~.h Fountain v ·atley Today's .Flnal voi:. 65, ~o. 143, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, MAY 22, 1972 TEN CENTS Beach Council Facing $13.7 Million Budget By TERRY COVILLE Of fllt Dtlllr 'llot Slltf A sharply reduced $13.7 million citv budget will be presented to Huntington Beach councilmen for the first time tonight durinJ a 7 o'clock study session. City Administrator David Rowlands said be cut $1 ,Sll,092 in various depart· ment requests before balancing the 1972· 73 budget at $13,735,027. The new budget represents no increase in ta1e11 or seriaus cutbacks in current • services. The city tax rate remains at $1.62 per $100 assessed valuation. In his budget message to the council, Rowlands outlines specific department requests that were left out of the pro- posed budget. He also lists 10 possiQle sources of additional revenue if co~ cilmen want to reinstate the cut pro- grams. Tonight's study session will be held ii\· the administrative annex. It is open to the public, but is not a public hearing. A IXOll County Speech Death Ban Vote Urged by Reagan By TOM BARLEY Of tflt Diiiy Plllt l faff Gov. Ronakt Reagan today in Anaheim urged "every Californian witlt a con- science" to sign a petition that would put the restoration of capital punishment in- itiative on the ballot in November. Reagan told the annual meeting of the Cllllomia Police Officers Aaaoclation in Disneyland Holtl that "the atate °"" you the fullest proti:!C:~ duty that daily Fl!* more "! lee that 125 la""'en w"" killed in tbe line of duty in this country last year. Twenty4.bree lawmen and correctional officert have died in catilomla aince January, 1971.'' Reagan said. "One is too many," Reagan declared to the cheers of the standing lawmen. "I want a mandatory first degree murder trial for anyone who kills a pol ice officer," the governor said. "A bill to this effect has passed the state Senate and is now befort the Assembly and I urge the zupport of every CaWomian for this vital measure." Reagan told more than SOO top California lawmen that the s t a t e Supreme Court threw out more than 200 years of legal precedent when It dumped the death -penalty earlier this year, "It reversed iUi own decision on the same case four years ago and did nothing by its very act to restore any standing it ever had with the people of California," Reagan said. The governor aaid another top priority of Californiana Hboth in terms of pro- tecting the public and easing the burden on lawmen" was a Jong overdue crackdown on pushers and dealers in drugs and narcotics. "More than 99,000 adults and 36,000 minors were arrested for drug offenses in 1970," Reagan said. "More than 1,000 deaths in Loa Angeles County alone were caused in that year by drug addiction." Reagan called for a "stiff upward revision" of the jail term meted out to drug dealers and public support for what he called "a new and comprehensive drug abu.oe treatment program •.. that will divert the first time user or posseS!Or of drugs away from our jails and prisons." Reagan said participants in the unique program will be given the opportunity "to share in treatment programs designed. to keep them from becoo'Ung addicted and restore them to a normal productive place in society." * Reagan said he particularly welcomed what will be "the massive use of citizen volunteers to help meet a mounting social problem. "We hope that we can reach the poten. tial young addict far more effectively than any inStitutional rehabilitation pr~ (See REAGAN, Page Z) 200 A rres~d In Storming Of Pentagon WASHINGTON (AP) -Demonslrat.ors attempted to enter the Peritagon today, shortly after their legal permit to dem· onstrate expired but were repulsed by police. About 100 building guards pushed back the head of the ragged column of pr<>- teaters and began making arresta. Among those taken into custody were an- tiwar leaders David Dellinger and Father James Groppi. (See earlier story, Page 4). At first there was little violence a,, guards blocked the forward push and began hauling off demonstrators one by one. But as the effort continued, guards were seen dragging some demonstrators to a waiting bus by the hair. Police said more than 200 demonstra .. tors were arrested. Leaders of the demonstration using a megaphone repeatedly urged the crowd to move forward "gently and persistenUy" and not attempt to storm the building. Only a fraction Of the group tried to enter the building. They were stopped 1n the middle of the street oatside. Another group sat down in the street, while still others stood aside and watched. A few rocks were thrown from the crowd in the direction of guards and newsmen standing on the Pentagon steps. Outside the aMault zone, two Vietnam Veterans Against the War butified a green army coat and a green army shirt to the cheers of the crowd. "That's four years of my life going up in names." one o: them said a1 the crowd sat on a macadam parking lot' outside the bull ding. !annal public hearing on tbe budget has been scheduled for June 12. Three deparbnents -public works, police and harbors and beaches -suf- fered . the biggest cutbacks in programs . they had requested for 1972-73. Police officials asked for $8Q.000 to hire additional patrolmen, but Rowlands is recommending only the addJtlon of three secretaries to t~ department. The secretaries will be used to write reports now handled by patrol officers. Rowlands says a speedier rePorting system will have the effect of releasing eight more patrolmen for patrol duty. Some $100,000 in cuts were made in programs requested hy the harbors and beaches department. This I n c I u d e s $30,000 for re strooms, $52,000 for pier railing and other improvements, and $18,000 for ml!cellaneous equipment. Public works suffered the biggest reduction, $497,520. The biggest single chunk in that r $200,000 which will not go into the department's tree replacement fund . Other public works cuts affect addi- tional personnel, some street lighting, and the p11rchase of two tru cks. The list of possible revenue s presented by Rowlands could be used in total or in any combination. The three most profitable revenue.s on the list are the oil tax, utility lax and tras}i pickup charges. Huntington Beach currently charges a PRESIDENT .NIXON AND SOVIET PRESIDENT POOGORNY (LEFT) IN MOSCOW · Light Moment Shared After Pr .. ida nt'1 Arriv1I el· Vnukovo II Airport Court Okays Conviction In Less Than Full Vote WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Supreme Court in a 5-4 vote held today that a state may permit convictions in criminal cases by less than a unanimous vote of the 12- man juries. The decision came in cases from LOuislana and Oregon. U n a n l m o u s verdicts are required in federal courts and most other states. Under Oregon'• constitution, 10 of 12 jurors may return a verdict of guilty ex- cept in murder casea. 1'be Louisiana practice under both law and the state constitution allows con- viction by nine'•of 12 jurors, except w~n the defendant could be sentenced to death in addition. Unanimity is required in less serious caaes: tried by five-man juries. Texas, MontMa, Idaho and Oklahoma allow less than unanimous verdicts £or minor offenses. In another case today, the court upheld the constitutioaality of federal and state immtmity laws used to require a witness to glve evidence or face jail for . con- tempt. The statues are used M a major \Veapon in the war on organized crime. The . >2 ruling came in test cases . challenging the immunity provision of the 1970 federal crime control law and ' New Jersey's ·5tate statute along the same lines. .They are used when · a witnesa resorts to the Fifth Amendment clalm that his testimony might incriminate him. The immunity decision dealt with tv.·o types of exemption from prosecution. Wallace Showing Reflex Ac tivity In Sole of Foot SILVER SPRmG, Md. (UPI) -Doc· tors reported today that George C. Wallace's toes have shown involuntary activity and an aide said that Wallace's son tickled hia father's feet "and his toes moved." The doctors said the development waa "most encouraging." But they said it was still difficult to ascertain whether Wallace will recover trom the paralysis innlcted by a would-be assassin's bullets last Monday afternoon. "Over the past 18 hours there has been some return of involuntary muScular ac· tivity to the toes of both feet," said a medical bulletin from doctors at Holy Cross Hospital. "Gov. Wallace exhibits normal reflex reaction when the sole or his foot is stimulated," the bulletin said. Big Crime 'on Last Legs' One is known as "use" immunity. This promises that a witness will not be pros.- ecuted for anything he says in his own testimony or any evidence of a crime deriving directly from it. But it doe! not exempt him from prot- ecution if testimony by other witneases or separate evidence links him to a crime. "There is also encouraging evidence of increasing sensations down to the level of the mid-thigh. The significance of these finding as regards to the final degree o{ recovery from his paralysis is diflicult to ascertain at this time but is most en- couraging." Kleindienst Says Vic tory over R ackets Imminent Crediting electronic s u r v e 111 an c e techniques as the amwer, Acting U.S. At. torney General Richard Kleindienst today predicted thait America. will cripple and totally control organittd crime within three to four years. He did not mention any specific ethnic groups or Individuals. but left litUe doubl In his rtf.,,,nces during tho Calllornlo Puce Officers' Association conVfDUO~ speech at th• Disneyland Hotel. , "A handful ol callous, e•tt, avariciouf rnen who think nothing of· rnurdtr, ex- tortion and perjury have become a .,_ log miugnancy In Amerlcao IOclety," he declartd. "But rntl'""'' prmed by this Admb>Jslration among which eledronlc aurvtlU.-fiC\lrtl prominently have pul 1,800 II tm. top crime filUrel out of ... business,'' Kleindienst charged. "We have tliminaled baU ol the leadership of 'the families ' and It is my prediction that in three to four years we wlll have this cancer complelely under our control," he added. Klelndlenal aaid he differed with Governor Reagan'• earlier appeal for the restoration of the de.ath penalty "in the sense that l believe we can only have Umltedapital~I whelbor Ii bo in CalUonila or~ elM. "By that I mean tbe death penalty for pollUcal usualrultlon, the ldllJllf el an on duty police olflcer and the majority of premeditated murder," KlelnclleMt ,.Id. .,I don't believe and t never have that we can Jndllde crimes of paulon In the <1t<!gol')' adYOC1ted today by Gov. Reqan," tbe ldinC federal allornq ~uld. Kleindienst predicted the d • c t I n e •'within 1 very few yean" of the drug problems ''that have achleved such tremendous proportions ln our society to- day. "It Is my belief that the Vl<tnam War which has JO d.lltressed the youth of our nation bu been a 'prime factor In so many young people tW11inJ to drugs as an escape," Kleindienst safd. He blam<d "a nation that oenf 500,000 young men who were never told wby they ,..,.. there. 1,000 mllea to fight a war wblle the "°"" 1t home ...,. told that that Wlr diiln'teiist." But Kleindienst felt that the "Inevitable wolution" of tbtt..war will usher in an e(a In which ~ -le will turn from drugs wltb 1111 'ftOOgnl~t "they have--.. the, OTlis lo our a'.»Clety." . "', ... ..... "' \ •1 'The other, much broader type is known to lawyers aa "transactional" Immun ity. This provides be can never be prosecuted for any crime involved in his teatimony. The court upheld "use" immunity In today's two decision•. Justice William O. Douglas, one of the lour dissenters 1n tbe jury decision, said the decision amounted to "a paring down of civil rights ••• that touch m03tly the lower cutes.Jn our society. I refer, of course, to the black!, the Chical\08, the one-mule rartners, the a g r i c u I t u r a I worken, the Off..beat students, the vle- tlms of the Rhetto." Justice 'l'hurlOOd Marshall a I ao dissented, declarin1 "today the <'Ollrt cuts the heart out or two· of the mo,,t lm· portant and Inseparable aal•llUards tho Biii of R11hta ollen • criminal deren· dent : The rig&t 10 aubmlt his case to a juty an~ the rl<bl to prool beyond a nasonabtt Cfoulil• ' Elvin Slanton, assistant press secretary to the wounded Alabama governor, said Wallace's son, George Jr .. 20, visited his father Sunday night cind burst into Wallace's staff room arttr the visit, ahoutinft: "! tickled his foot and his toes moved. Then I held up ahttt so he could see It." Stanton said lhe younger Wallace in· t!i~ted the governor was pleased with the new development. Bllly Joe Camp, Wallace'• press secretary, Jssued a atalmlent from Comella Wnllttce, the governor's wife. "I'm.not surprised," she aa.ld of the new development. "I wu most opUmistlc all along and I thank the people of this counlry for their prayel'I and 1 hope they will continue to pray for my husband." Camp aald thal clespltt the doclol'I' wartainty about whether Wallace would recover lrom paralyslJ, "tbla la the beglrmlnJ'ol .movtm<nt we wu. all bop. log fer." ' ' ' • per barrel oil tax of 2 ~ cents. If raised tn , lhree cents 1t would produce an ad- ditional $83,150. Rowland s says. If raised lo four cents the added revenue would be $259,450 and at five cents it would be $41 5,750 above the current rate. lf homeowner! were once again charged for trash collection, the city could save $660,000 it aow pays for trash collection, Rowland siys. Each user wou1d wind up paying $1 .82 per month for (See BUDGE!", Page .zJ At Dinner Rece}!tion In Mo scow MOSCO\V (UPI) -President Nixon told Kremlin lenders tonight they together can make peaceful cooperation a reality during their summit talks this w~k. "Because we are both prepared to pr0.o ceed on the basis of equality and mutual respect, we meet a moment when we can make pe.aceful cooperation a reality,•• Nixon .said. The President made the st.atement in a loql tonlghl 11 ~ lavish stale dinner Ill booor of him, Mra. Nixon and his official party four bouro alter his arrival in MOICOw for a week of .summit talks. The arrival reception was friendly but restrained. Crowd!, largely silent, watched a motorcade on the 17-mile trip from Vnukovo Airport to the Grand Kremlin Palace, wbere tbe dlruler abo ll'" held. Nixon's plane arrived five minutes ahead of the schedu led 4 p.m. landing. The weather was humid, the skies gray. The Soviet officia ls were animafldly friendly for this first visit in peacetimf! to Russia by a U.S. President. It was late afternoon when the Presl· dent arrived, and he, Mrs. Nixon and other members of the official U.S. party were guests at the lavish dinner by their hosts in the Hall of Facets of the Gnmd Kremlin Palace where the NiJona are aitaying . His face-to-face talks with Brezhne• end the other Soviets begin Tueeday morning. Jn his dinner toast, Nixon said the eyes of the world are focused on the possibility of a Soviet-American agreement to limit strategic nuclear arms. "An agreement in this area could begin to tum our ~ountries away from a wasteful and dangerotl! arma race and toward more production for peace," be said. An hour after his arrival in Moscow Nixon slipped into a Kremlin office and 11pent 45 minute! alone -except for two :~!~s g;ne~!~ o'f'°~d ~v~:tezh~ munist party, tbe acknowledged Soviet leader, Russian sources told UPI cor· respondent Henry Sl'lapiro. Reporter• accompanying the Ni:ions estimated the crowds en route to the Kremlin from the airport at about 100,000 -fairly small by Moscow 1tand- a~1 for a major visiting foreign dl&-nitary. Orange Weather l\fore SUMhine on the agenda for Tuesday with continued warm temperatures. Highs at the beaches 62 rising to 72 in the Inland artaa:. Lows 48-53. INSIDE TODi\l' Th< Coste lftS<J Clolc Pia!/" h o u 1 t and tht Htrnttngton Beach PUzyhou!e both opened thtir !ta.son·cl o!ing productionJ over the wttktnd. Bot1' art re~ viewed today. s.. Ent<rtaln- mtnt, Pog" 18·19. LM. •• ,,. ' -... ,, _ .... .. .. __ • CtH..,lllt I or-.. c..-lltY .. Clhtlfl ... """ Sv!Tl• ,.,_ " c""k' " .-. 1141 c,...,_.. u .• ""''"' ''"" DMtt1 Httlftot " ·-" lfltw\11 PHt ' --, .. ,, 1111"'1.ll-1 "·1P -• PIMllKt , .... WMfll' .... ~ ......... " ............... , ... ._, u --• • i 2 DAILY PILOT Bqard 01\.s Preschool In Valley A series of. new programs for preschool and for hanr:Ucapptd children has been awroved by tru stees of !he Fountain Valley School District. ' tlowever, final approval from the RC<- tual outside funding sourct.s of the new programs i11 still ptndlng. Trwtees asked that no district funds be used for the pro- ~nt1ns. 'fhe new programs include proposals for two pre-schools. and for special classes for bllnd children. multlple-han· dJcapped children1 and aphasic children. Jf funded, all programs would go nto effect next fall. school officialll said. One of the proposed preschools, at an as yet undecided site, would serve 30 children a day in two session,, that would each be: two and a halt houni long. Estimat~ CO$t of tht program, which would be borne by the Community Services Project of the Model Cities Program of Fountain Valley, would be $20.000. Enrollment would be open throughout the city beginning in Sep- tember if the money is available. !he ot her preschool wOuld serve oniy ~h1ldren of welfare parents under fund ing fro mthe Orange County Social Welfare Department . In addition to preschool care; it would also provide after·school programs for older children whose parenls worked. The programs for the handicapped would all rely on st.ate funding. The multiple-handicapped would be located in t1vo ~elf:<;ontained classrooms at Plavan School., .~e aphasic children wouJd go to Gl~ler $cbool. Chll<tren Jegal)y blind, but still able to ~see would attend their oommunlty schools, Six to eight children would be involved In each of the three categories sc:hool or.. ficials sa_id . Total cost.of the pr~grams for the handicapped was estimatt'd at $70,000. School officials noted that the children Involved in these progrl41lls next year had fortnerlr been bused outside-the distrlCt. Dµ9 .Net $2,000 In·· Pre-dawn Viejo Stickup A manhunt continues today for a pair of bandits who confronted a Mission Viejo resta~t;p~ul8ger at gwnpotnt Saturday and IOOk i:i;oqo from· the 8afe. . Steve Pqwers. 23, of HunUngton Beach 11aid the pair blindfolded him with ta~ and !or<ed Mm b\!ck Into the Jolly Ox after flR;>r'i!ink him as he locked the restaurant's doors. Powen was closing up the nightclub at I~ Paz and Cabot roads during predawn houri when one of the gunmen confronted him , sheriff's deputies said. The victim said he was herded across the pa.kjng lot to a second armed bandit before both pushed him back into the Jolly Ox to get the evening's cash receipts. Stumbling in with his eyes taped, Powers said he could only describe the first bandit as being a thin man adding that both spoke in a mldwestern iwang. From Pagel REAGAN ••• Big Mouth With a beak like this, it would seem fitting if th is pelican \v e r e making a campaign s peech -..:. he's not -he's just \\ailing for ::;ome food to be thrown his way at the World of Animals. outside of Dallas. Trustees Slate Special Meeting Hunt!Jlgton Beach High School Di..trict trustees will hold 1 special meeting at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday to hear a report con- cerning the district's guidance and counseling program. The meeting wJJJ be held. tn the Hun- tington BfacnRfih School cafeteria and will be followed by the res1:11~ board meeting beglnning at 7:30 p.m. A second preliminary report from the dist rict's maste~· ·piJ finn will be presented at the r.gular meeting. The master plaMers will present add itional projections on the growth of the district and indications on how school facilities can best be utlllzed in the future. Entries Pour In For 4th Parade Sixteen color guards, 14 band>, 10 noata, and nearly 1,500 pusons have reg\ltered so far to participate in Hun- tington Beach's annual July 4th parade. May 31 is the final deadllne for registration, according to Jack Tatham of Huntington Beach Jaycees, who are sponsoring the event. Tatham said he expects 250,000 people !ll the "lty's 68th annual parade. Theme of tilia year's celebration will be "Salute to American Music." Included in the bands are the nationally famous Kings men Drum and Bugle eorp's and the 3rd Marine Aircraft Wing Bend rrom El Toro Marine Cor~ Air Station. ' --j. : Execution Baffling To Police 'The execution·llke murder of Frank a.nd Shirley Schiavone of Westmlru:ter two weeks ago continue s to baffle police, who say they still have no idea who the murderer might be. "We're basicall:.· where we were when we started," said Westmins ter police Sgt. Frank Fisher tod,y. The Schiavones were shot in the back as they returned to their home at 6202 Choctaw Prive at 2:20 a.m. May 9. Last week police published a compo11ite drawing of a man believed to have been with the Schiavones in a bar the night they were killed. "A lot of people knew 1omeone who fit that drawing," Fisher aaid, "but we checked out all the leads and didn't get anything.'' Nevada Judge Refuses License To Bawdyhouse VIRGINIA CITY. Nev. (APf -A Dis trict Court judge in this one-time silver mining comtnunity has refused to order li censing of a house of prostitution, saying to do so would "demean the stature of the court." Judge Frank Grtgory declined to grant a request in a suit filed by Irene York, who contended the Storey County Com- mission created a monopoly by licensing only one house of prostitution -Joe Con· forte'1 well~known and popular Mustang ranch. Gregory noted at the end of a day.Jong hearing in the 96-year-old courthouse that the state legislature had given counties "the authority within thtir discretion to license th is somewhat disreputable bu siness ." NEW VICE CHANCELLOR UCl'1 H111rd Adams , , Hazard Adams·. Appointed UCI Vice Cl1ancellor Dr. Hazard Adams. dean of the school of humanities at UC Irvine, has been ap- pointed vice chancellor of academic af· fairs. Announcement of the action by the UC Board of Regents was made jointly by UC President Charles J . Hitch and UCI Chancellor Daniel G. Aldrich, Jr. Dr. Adams ·succeeds Dr. Rogger W. Russell who resigned to become chief ex· eculive officer of Flinders Untveraity·of South Australia earlier this spring. Dr. Adams, an expert on literary theory and 20th Century Angl~Irish literature, joined the UCI facuJty in 1964 and served as founding chairman of the department of English for five years. He was named dean of humanities two and on~half years ago. Earlier, he had taught at Michigan State University, Cornell University, and the University of Texas. A graduate of Princeton University, he earned ma ster of arts and doctoral degrees at the University of Washington. 2 Die of Auto Injuries; Total For County 97 A housewife and a young man have Jost two and 11J:-wee.k fights for life, becoming the 95th and 16th traffic aocldent fatallttes of the current year in Orange County. He is the author of two novels, "The ...._Truth About Dragons : An Anti-Romance" and "The Horses of Instruction," and several other books, including "Blake and Yeats : The Contrary Villon," "William Blake: A Reading of the Shorter Poems,'' "The Contexts of Poetry" and "111.e Interests of Criticism." Victlms were Identified as Mrs. Lor .. ralne Baker, of 12891 Truk Ave., Garden Grove and Terry Sears, 20, of Fullerton. Sears was iQjured six weeks ago when his car swerved and spun off Tonner Can- yon Road near the Orange Freeway overpass and overturned. He succumbed Friday at St. Jude Hospital tn Fullerton, while Mrs. Baker died at St. Joseph's Hospital in Orange the same day from her injuries. _ She WaJ standing in her front yard two weeks ago when a four-wheel trailer broke loose from a truck, careened over the curb and ran her down. Jnvestigators said a hitch and Bafety chain connecting the trailer and truck driven by Thomas W. Moore, 33, of 1756 Sherry Lane. Santa Ana, broke and caused the accident. The UCI Friends of the Llbrary recently selected "'l1te Truth about Dragons" u one of the outstanding books written by Orange Councy-author• in 1971. • ,;, ~ Extortion Case Suspect Seized Behind Market Santa Ana poliee arrested an alleged extortionist Saturday night vfflen he picked up a paper sack behind a super· 'market. tltino Bil& Supervisor Asks For Open Space ' Third District Coonty S u p e r v J 1 o r William J. PhilllPo today proposed the establishment of an open space preserve Jn the Chino Hills area nortb of Yorba Linda and east of Brea. Downey Savings G1·oundhreaking Ends Skirmish Groundbreaking ceremonies Tuesday for a new branch of Downey Savings end Loan in Huntington Beach will not only •ignal the SWt ol a $400,000 building, but U>e end of a long contro\(ersy. The tw~story sa.vings and Joan o.ffice will be built on the southeast comer of Adams Avenue and Brookhu rst street. property once o"·ned by the city or Newport Beach and planned for a gas station. Homeowners fought the gas station plan and halted Newport Beach plans to sell the land . They ~'ere afraid piecemeal development of some 18.5 acres of vacant land might lead to the construction of epartments on part of it. Now, preliminary development plans call for office and professional buildings on most of the land. The Downey Savings facil ity is the first. It will include office space. The city of Huntington Beach approved construction of the savings and loan of- fice Oct. 20. It's a tw~story building with 13,500 square feet of office space. From.J>age 1_ .. BUDGET,, .. trash collection. The city's five-cent utility tax now pro- duces $1,440,000. I£ raised a penny it would bring an additional $288,000 ; two cents, $576,000, or three cent!, an ad· ditional $864,000 above .. the curmit revenue. Other suggested revenue makers In. elude: Revision of the busine.u license fee to some type ot gross receipts, an ad· ditional $'15,000 to $100,000; revise other license and permlt charges to renect cost. $45,000; raise the hotel tax a penny, $9,000: inerease parking IJot fees, $501000 to $100,000. , ~· increase inlP(oRtJiy tu es lor parkr. and tecreation (trdtri 17 cents to 20 cents) could produce $118,920. The general fund property tax could be raised four cents to $1. which would bring $160,859. A third possible property ~ increase could be made for music and promotion, from 2.8 cents to five cents, earning an additional $87.208. Rowl~. however •. suggests that pr~ perty tax increases nught be set aside in preference to other charges. He did not recommend any 11pecific revenue source but _ s~i.d. he . was presenting them a~ poss1bil1hes if the council wants to restore programs which had to be cut. He also promised that once this budget is finl!hed and adopted, he wlll begin work on a six-year master budget. Phillips has reserved time at 10 a.m. Tuesday on the Board of Supervisor~ agenda to present his plan for a feasi bil i- ty study of the proposed open space proJ· eel which would illvolvc up to 17.000 acres. The property in question incl udes 2,500 a~res earm8f'ked for the proposed Chino }111Js Regiona l Airport 1\•hich Phillips snid should not be given ful'thcr {'Onsideratiuri by the county. Friday, tnrndreds of leners \1·cre mailed to Phillips' constitutents in lhe Third District explainng the proposal. The supervisor said today the projet-l would involve land in Riverside and San Bernardino coun ties as well as Orange County and is located roughly between Brea and Yorba Lioda and C.Orona and Chino. Phillips said in the letter that his pro· posal was an answer to a recom· fT!endaton .by the Yorba Linda City Coun· c11. Councilmen pointed out that there are no plans for a wilderness park in northeastern Orange County at this time. The Federal Aviatio"n Administration ha s called for \l'ritten comments on 1 1nodified plan for the Chino Hills airport. Phillips has asked the FAA to schedule another public hearing to be held in the Third District on the airport. A hearing was held Feb. 3 in Placentia and the airport project was vigorously opposed by residents and offjcials Or Yorba Linda, Brea, Placentia .and Fullerton. . Since then backers of the airport proJ· Ject ha~e reduced the size in hopes of damperung the opposition and to conform to FAA regulations on UH cl air 1pace in the Los Angeles Basin. Pro~ositioti 9 Debate Pla11ned For Huntington A public deb.at e on state Proposition 9. the pollutio n initiative, will be held at 7:30 p.m., Tuesday, in the Lake Park Clubhouse, Huntington Beach. Speakers from the ''People's Lobby" and "Californians Against the Pollution· lnitiative," will debate points of PrOJX1Si· tion 9 which is on the June 6 prilDll'J' ballot. Jim Sommers, a pharmacist and coordinator of Orange County Stamp Out Smog, will speak in favor of the issue. He \\•ill be opposed by Ed ' Edwards, a chemical engineer and member of the concerned scientists and engineers speakers bureau . Lake Park Clubhouse is at Lake and 12th streets. Tuesday's debate is sponsored by the Hunting ton Beach Environmental Council. A question and answer period will follow the debate. Huntington Sets Budget Session -. gram," Reagan said. Reagan drew cheers from his audience \Vhen he lauded the late J. Edgar Hoover as "a very great American who built a~ organization that \Vas the target of unfair and totally unjustified criticism. •J)iffi~ult .Joh-> Officers sa id Steve J. Krokus of U972 Yorba St., in the north Tustin area re- portedly telephoned the Safeway Market, 1445 s. Main St., and demanded $5,000 cash, "and I'll te!J you where your daugh- ter is." The market's manager whose child was threatened asked police to go to a baby· sitter's home which did not have a tele- phone. There they found the +year.old girl safe and unharmed. Texaco Sells Last Of Huntington WeHs ,, A "tight but manageable" 1ehool ·• budget for 1972-73 is slated for discussion Tuesday night by trustees of the Hun. tington Beach City (elementary) School District. "~o ".'merica n ever displayed greater ~ed1cat1on to duty or Jived up to the finest idea ls o( public service than th~ giant of a man wha directed the FBI for 43 years," Reagan said. "He was not tolerant of cri me , viole nce or subversion and he \\'as never taken In by the thpusand masks that criminals and subversives wear in their constant ef(ort to corrupt and destroy our system of goverrurient and justice" Reagan Stlid . . ' OllANGI COAST •• DAILY PILOT Tht Or1r.oe Cotti OAtL Y PILOT •lift fl'llldl b <Ol'l'lbinld the Ntwt·Prtn, ts P!fblllhfll l>Y t111 Ot•"'IQt< Co1st Pvbll1M119 COl'l'l!>ln'f, Stp11o rtte e<titton1 1rr p.,bllthrd, Mond.ly tt>ro!Xil\ r'rld1y, for Ccst1 M._1, f<ffWPOrf 1r1c11, H11nt111aton De1ct>fFOlll'l!tln V1!1toy, t..~0111'11 "*tell, lrvln./S1d<lltbl<k 11\d $1n CltmtMe/ Safi J11'fl C•pl1l•1M. A stntlt r19!Q11tl tdlllon ~1 l>Vllllshfd S.lvrd1ys •fld $11n<11vt. T~t prlnclMI ll\lblllhlnt pl1nt It 1t llO Wf11 81y $trrtl, Co1ia Mnt. C1111ornl1, ,,.H. Robrrt N. W,1d Pr·,1Jd1nt 11111 P11blllhtr Jlck R. Curl•v V1(f Prbkl1n1 •nd Ot11tr11 M1n191 c Thom•• K•1wil flfl!ot lliorri1t A. M11rphir1• MMllOlnt Edlror Ch1rln H. Looi Ric>.1r1' P. Nt ll At•lll1nt M•lllOlf'IO Eefltt11 T1ttV Ce,llle "Wei Ori ... COlll'llY fclllor "''"'--Offiq 17t1S ••••fl lovl•'l'I~ M1 Ui11 Addt11u P.O. lea 790, 92l41 °""' Ofllc• t.ltVM IHd\· ni Jlorttt A\'tl'lut Clfll Mei: ~ Wft;I l•I' ~lrwt NrwJ10r1 lt1ch: UU f>lnoort I01i1ltv1'4 Sift CJtmMtt: JOS Horffl 1:1 C•rrilno .... T ..... , .. C71fJ '41 ... J21 ~ A4hi9ril•ltlt 64l·if71 ,,_ ,..,. ...... C..r C'""nMlll"' Mf..IJH ~t. 1f7t., Ot.,.. C..1t l'\IOlllifllnl ~· ... """ ....... '""'"'~ •lwi.t INfW .,. ldYWli.~ ._..... ,., .. ·-·~Jal "~' ..... , .... ....... ~ ........ ,...., -. ,...... •lll 11 c.-ta ~ Cllllfl .... ,._,...,,. .. ttNfiH' Iii.II = .. 111'19'1 a.11 '"°""''"' lflill,.,., • a.as .,..,"'"· . ' 6th Graders Stage Ow1i 'Airport' By JOHN ZALLER 01 lllt 0111'1' Piiot Sll!I They were picketed by wild-eyed N:ologists, hi·jacked to Cuba by a gang of thugs, and besel by bills they had dif- iiculty paying. For 50 sixth graders at Gisler Intermediate School in Huntington Beach, the formation of Super Scenic Airways as a class project 'vas a little more difficult than they had anticipated . Rearranging desks. chairs and tables to form a mock airport lobby. jet cabin, and control tower proved easy enough. Even the formation o( seven classroom com· mittees -finance, operations, stewardesses. personnel, passenger service, advertising, and pilots and main- tenance -\Vent smoothly. But when they got down to tough issues, like the minimum number of passengers needed to make a prof it, how to. attract those passengers, how to deal wllh the ecologists -then the going got a bit rougher. "There 's a lot nwre to runni ng an 11irllne company than I thought." said Dan Salter, co-chnirman of the.board or directors. "We made sn awful lot of phone calls to airline people trying to find out how they did it." "We wanted to be as realistic as possl· hie so that we would be competitive " ad- ded Virginia Strauss, co-chairman ~f the board. ' Any thought the sixth graders might have had for re.forming the world got lost In the shuffle. They Included a profit margin In trying to balance their books, Ibey poured money Into travel ad· · vertislng. they filled their mock airport lobby not with Beatl'8 and RolUng Stones, but with adult •ssy IJ.st<nlng music. · And when It came to handling the sign. carrying ecologists -w~ came from • nelghborlnl classroom that was stud)'lng ec<lloBJI -Salter sounded exacUy Uk• a hardltne company president uwe. tried lo move the Peopte out It fast as. Wt ceuld,., aald Salter. '!But they wani.d to talk about how oar jets ,..,.. })Ollutlng the atmospht,._ Sin, they do pollute some. but people have to travel.'' "They could have written us letters \vilh their objections:• added Miss Strauss. '"That "'Ould have been better." Flnally, with help from a teacher the protesters were disbanded. ' "Our aim was just to make SSA a suc- cessful company," Salter explained. Most of their changes from the "real world" were more idealistically motivated. By .a total class vote , stewardesses \Vere allowed to wear glasses, for ex- ample. And on their application blank th~ question "Are You Single?" wa~ eliminated. "We felt ·lhat it was a stewardess' own ousl ness whether she was married or not," said Miss Strauss. "It's not fa ir to disqualify her on those grounds like the regular airlines do." Salle,r also pointed out that SSA aimed at a profit of $5 per passenger on an average flight. "J know one airline that makes $9 to $10 prorit.. and I think that Js too much." Salter said. For the last three weeks the sixth graders worked on their pr o j e ct culminating last week in a visit by aboui JOO parents, or "passengers." Among them also was an enthuslasUc district suptrlntendent, S. A. Moffett. "It was very realistic," said Morfett. .. ,,,. only thing missing WU I tape of jet noise wbtn they told us wt M:re tak· ing off." Valley Board Member 1 Named lo State Unit Shiel• Meyers, presld<nl of the llotrd of Tnist .. s of the Fountain Valley School D~trl'!o bas been appolnled to the Delegate Assembly or the Csllfornla School Boards As90Clatlon. Mrs. Mayers was one of II delegates from school boards throughout Or1nge County sel•cted f« the statewide board district ofllclals have announced. Mrs'. Meyers hss strved on the Fountain Vallty 1<bool board sin<e !961, • Investigato rs said Krokus told the man. ager to place a bag of paper containing the $5,000 at the rear of the market. Pollce advised the manager to place the hag there but to fill it with shredded paper. When Krokus picked up the bag, he was arrested and is being held on ex- tortion charges. Texaco. Inc., has sold the last of its Huntington Beach oil wells to the Hampton Oil Co. of Garden Grove. City oil field superintendent Herb Day that leaves only Signal Oil, Standard Oii and Union Oil as major producers in the state's fourth largest producing oil field. Texaco had 15 wells in the southe·ast part of the city, near Adams Avenue and Beach Boulevard. The preliminary budget figures indicate , , a spending level of $6. l ·million, an in· crea.se of $600.000 over this school year. A tax 1ncrease is not expected. The trustees' regul ar meeting Js i1cheduled for 7:30 p.m. in the library of ··' Dwyer Intermediate School, 5202 Palm : • Ave. .. Beautiful Diamond Rings at Big Savings LADllS WIDDIN• AND IN•A•IMINT II .. In Bll'llCIW 1tri.t • l/J ct. •i.r'l'llllnlll • Mt 111 yelll!W .... LAD Ill WIDDllllO AND llllh•IMINT lllM AT l/J ct. •lilr'l'llllnlll • Ill •n• ...,._ LADlll WIDDIH .\Ma INOA•IMINT 11 ... lllT c.-.ttr •II"*" _,_.,.,,. ..., • llNU "',,..,. ..... I/I cl. s.t ill wfliN ...... U.Dlll .... '=-' $225 $185 $165 $155 ••• "••<• 1110 175 s50 DOii IACm OUR MOST UNUSUAL DIAMOND GUARANTEE WIDDIN• AMO IN•A•IMINT llNO $275 '135 Ctn!lf flt"*°"" 1/1 d , 11'1111 J -" ·~ frtftl wt A • Wh ~t. 11'1 Wiiii. ..... • en )'OU buy I df• Clioose from over l 25 wedding ring sets. Also large selection of mond 1""" "' wo will sofftalres. guorontff th1t diamond I 1t 40'-' MORE than yo., pald for It or your money back. Can you do 11 woll eluwheni? COMPARE. ~· . '· ·~ . '-.. . ,1: . ..... ,c" ' , ~~· ,, '.:· ~.,(. •'· 1\! .. ;. I I ' I • ' ' i • I I t , \ I ...... 4J. ·---•, • Wiand.,, "'., n , 1"72 H DAil V ,!LDT 1 Major Soviet Goals Behind Summit Eagerness By WILLIAM L. RY 4N .. ,. tHC!iil CtrT' • ., ...... Only two weeks ago, the chances that the Kremlin would countetiance a summit mett.Jng with President Nixon at this time 'fl'tre, in the view of many, worth Jeu than a plugged kopek. Now the summit is about to begin on schedule. Why? d!ei!i.on to mlne North Vietnamese ports to slow Soviet !upplies would wash out the !Ummit. It didn 't. 1r .. ty Just ratilied In Bonn. Tho R"5SianJ cannot hope to elpt! American tnnuenct from Europe ~use it is so entrenched in so many ways, bot they can hope to persuade Europeall! that a U.S. military presence is becoming ever less Important: perhaps both the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and the Warsaw Pact could be dismantled. Behind the apparent eagerness of General Secretary Leonid I. Brezhnev and his colleagues In the soviet Com. munist party leadership to meet this week with the President are a number of major Soviet policy goals. Although the Russians vow to continue supplying billions of rubles worth of hardware to Haooi , the Vietnam situation is getting in the way or S-Ome major Soviet goals. The Kremlin eye has long been intently fixed on Europe. Its drive for a security conference goes back many years and recently has had the highest priority. Moscow wants Europe to agree to the idea of a ··renunciation of force'' in the same pallern as the eWst German-Soviet The Rim!ans can hope that the Bonn-- Moscow treaty and the summit will mean steps toward an all-Europe security ar· rangement accepting the status quo on the continent. That would lessen the need for the awkward Brezhnev Doctrine It had aeemed on May I that Nixon's Hinshaw Hits Schmitz GOP Vote Record By PAMELA HALLAN ·Of the Dilly J'llot 11111 Andrew J. Hinshaw, a candidate for the 39th Congressional District seat held by Rep. John Schmitz (R-TustiPI ). today charged his opponent with. abandoning the Republican Party and President Nix- on as well. Addressing a group of students at Mission Viejo High School !his morning, Hinsha\v, incumbent Orange County tax assessor, questioned his opponent 's in· tegrity and ability to represent the citizens in his district. "Any elected official should have honesty, integrity and should say what he means, despite the p o I i t i c a I con- sequences, without double-talk,'' Hinsha'# gaid . ''He should know the bills affecting his: district and represent the views of · his constituents despite his own personal views," Hinshaw continued. "He claims to be a Republican, yet he has abandoned the Republican party," Hinshaw asserted. DAILY PILDT 11111 Pllete He cited Schmitz' voting record which he said sho\ved him voting against the Republican Party and President Nixon 51 percent of the time: against general Republican principles 60 percent of the time and against President Nixon 85 per· cent of the time. Sliglitly Disoriented Cub "You cannot have a man in politics who consi$1ently votes al!:ainst his party," Hinshaw said. "He likes to proclaim himself a .. ng defender of the mililary. That's fine, but does he vote that way? . __ No." Hinshaw said that on April 26, a bill came up for c. vole which would increase pay for military men and increa9e retire- ment benefits for military personnel. Hinshaw said Schmitz cast a no vote on that measure. He also cited Schmitz' claim of being strongly against drug abuse , set Hinshaw claimed Schmitz: was one of two representatives to vote against a bill which would increase money for in· atitutions trying to help the narcotic ad-- diet. "Schmitz should not engage in so much double-talk," he said. "Orange County is considered the most conservative of Republican areas with a national repuation for being a bit kooky but perhaps that is because of John Schmitz. "Thi! county carried Californ ia for President Nixon during the last election," he emphasized. Yet Hinshaw charged Schmitz has been suppcrting fellow Rep. John Ashbrook of Ohio who is working to unseat President Nixon, Hinshaw said . The county official told a small group of students that he has more to offer than his opponent. Hinshaw· said he knows the county bet- ter than any other single individual and is close to its people and its problems. Hinshaw pledged lo bring expertise in the area of financing to Congress. Hinshaw also pointed to the county's high rate of unemployment and emphasized that congressmen are in a position to in- fluence the location of government con- tracts. He said he bas traveled to Washington and found that "Schmitz has no rapport with government officials," and this would hurt the county's ~hances of rtteiving any (OVemment co~tracts. . During a qu~stion and answer 1ess1on Hinshaw told students: -He supports President Nixon'a Viet- nam policies. -He supports the wage and price con· trol instituted by the N i 1 o n Administration because of inflation. Pocahontas, one or Frasier's many cubs from Lion Country Safari, seems to be asking, "\Vhy are all those people out there staring at me?" as she was on hand Friday night to receive a Headliner A\vard on behalf or daddy from the Orange County Press Club. Frasier, the aging lothario lion or many wives and many cubs, \Von the "Com- munal Service" award. Experimental Airplane _ Crash [(ills Coast Man A Dana Poinl man and his flying com- panion were killed Sunday when their ex- perimental, hand-built biplane lost power and crashed into the desert west of Vic· torville. San Bernardino County Sh er i If' s deputies sald Floyd Eugene Robinette. 36, of 25222 Brigantine Drive, Dana Point, and James Herbert Richter, 46 , of Pomona. were pronounced dead at the scene at the 9 a.m. crash at the y,·est end of El Mirage Dry Lake. Mr. Robinette \vas employed as an engineer with TRW "Systems, Inc., and X-rated Movie Was Bad Scene ATHENS. Ga . (UPil -Watching aA X-rated movi e has cost two policemen si,¥:-month suspensions. Assistant Police Chief Clarence Schullz told the Athens Civil Serv- ice Commission that he searched for officers David Hansen and Jimmf Means in the downtown area for over 30 minutes the night or May 3 wilhout finding them. Schultz said he then went to the Paris Adult Theatre, a movie house raided in recent months on obscenity charges, and found the pair leaning against the back wall watching a11. X-rated film. The officers said they entered the theater to make a "rouLine check." was a qualified commercial pilot. He is survived by his wife , Reba, and two children. Funeral arrangements are pen· ding at Sheffer Mortuary in San Clemente. Sheriff's deputies said the two men had taken off in the open-coc kpit aircraft and were testing it to obtain Federal Aviation Administration clearance to operate it from commercial air fields. Several hundred spectators watched the airplane Jose power at about 60 feet and plunge straight into the desert. The men were attending a flying meet of the Independent Protective Order of Taildraggers when the crash occurred. The fl ying association is made up of flwners of the older type airplanes with a strut rather than a wheel as a tail lan- ding gear. Cleric Ca1icels Walk 01i Water, Cites Leg Wound JACKSON, Miss. (UPI) -The Rev. W. L. Jenkins, the self-styled Third Prophet of GOO. called off plans to walk on water at the Ross Barnett reservoir because of a leg wound he said he received the morning of hi.s proposed feat. The black , nondenominational minister told police Sunday he was hit in the leg by shots fired from a passing car. Progra1n Ba~ked Authorities .said Jenkins was treated for a "flesh-wound" and was not believed .seriously injured. The slight!y·built minister announced Friday that he would walk on the waters Sunday afternoon. Ht broadcast his plans on a local radio program he emcees. Fa.cts on Narcotics 'Not Enoug1i' Or1nge County Schools Superintendent Robert Peterson says tea~hlng stu~ents only the facts about drugs 1s much Like a mothe.r warning her child not to stuff beana up his nose. "When she leaves, then he e.x· pe.rlments," Or. Peter~ suggeste~. Peter.t0n was m1k1ng the pcmt to Or e County Board of Education mem· be~•st week what "facts alone" can lead to fa scination which c11n al!O lead to expertmentlltion in the drug cullure. He mide his l'Cport as part of a lengthy rebuttal tn the quslms expressed by two county school trustees about the county· sponsored druf abuse education program. Truattes slll have not decided whet.htr to continue the program avaUable to all c:ounly achoOls for 1nother year. The board ...,., to bo apllt l to 2 with RDtier Andenon of HUlltinJtton Beach •Dd Dr. lllle Ra1lltoe from Sota Ana crlllc1! of tho procram. The American ~1edical Association, Peterson reported. conlends that "unless something is done about attitudes toward drug use" a deeline in it won 't take place. In the county program, teachers have 10 three-hour workshops where they le1rn about drugs and about how to Instill self- confidence And defenses against pee:r ~ssure in students. Jn high school classt$, Peterson said, fact! about drugs "are often rejected in· tellectually. '' 14ike malaria must be prevented by "swatting m~Wtos, a quite foreign act in fighting disease," Peterson said, "some parents seem to not believe talk· ing about risk-behavior ~feats the sprtad of drug abuse. "Bul It appears ef!ect.lve.,'' he con- cluded. Tnmt.., did not disdw hi• rtport, which ho said would bo <0nltnlled II 1 1111~ mttti111. Suspect Seized: 'Guilty as Sin' Tinkering with a car radio can be troublesome, especially when Costa Meaa police catch you doing it about 11 :30 p.m. Sunday in a closed auto agency owDe:d and operated by someone else. This Js what landed ~ 28-year~ld man In city jail on suspicion of vehicle tampering early today, according to Patrol Sgt Sam Cordeiro. He warntd the arrestee he had the right to remain silent and anything he said could bt used against him In court. but the auspeet reportedly poured out a Ule of remorse anywa y. "I'm gutlty ., sin and I'm llO!TJ' I tried to do ii ind I'm sorry I got caught. but mostly I'm aorry l ttled to do t~" be allegedly declared. whl<h hWstJ Oil the right to !nterv<ne wherever Communist rule 1s threatened. The Soviet Union'• western buffers could be considered permanent and un- chnllengable. What else do the Russians want from the summit? They want expanded economic and trade ties with the West and the United Statu and access to \Yestern technology for application to the Soviet con.sumer economy. The Soviet system is more than 50 years old now and its domestic ecooomy still suffers from comparison with Weslem lllandinlJ. The Poll~ 10111 has been feellnl the prwure of popular impatience.. The Soviet economy eould make of· fecUve use of some ol the enormous in· vestment in superweapons and defense. Some sort of agreement on limitation of mlsslles would be attractive. to Brezhnev, as it would to Ni1on. There has been some expectation that 11. beginning, at least, emanating from the 1trategic ann limitation talks may bt ready to memorialize th.is 1ummJt. China figures largely in Soviet reason- ing ori the need for this summit, and not only because Moscow ml&hl wut to balance lhe Ni.Ion visit to Pettna. Soviet fear of China is real. Soma l& spired leaks in Moscow these days suggest that the Nixon moves .in Vietnam Will force closer Red OllnMe-Soviet cooperation. But there has bffn no aJin that the basic Moscow-Peklne dlfferencu were being patched up, The Soviet Union still has a million troops on the long Chinese border. A quiet Europe would permit Brezhnev and his colleagues to pay clO!er attention to Ask! and the contest with China, without too much sacrifice to the Soviet domestic economy. Red Tanks Approach Hue 7th Fleet Bombardment Halts North Vietnamese Pwh SAIGON (UPI ) -North Vietnamese using PT76 amphibious tanks swarmed across the My Chanh River defense line 22 miles north or Hue today in an ap- parent effort to establish a bridgehead. Heavy fighting was reported in the area al nightfall. The North Vietnamese probing attack, the second in two d'ays, was believed halted by intense na val bombardment from U.S. 7th Fleet ships off the coast, by Allied air strike that cosl an F4 Phan- tom jet, and by Allied artillery. A South Vietnamese spokemsan in Saigon said tonight the North Vietnamese had been driven back across the river by nightfall. but reports from the area itself were unclear. U.S. advisers said they thought today's attacks were a "pfobe or reconnaissance in force" rather than an all-out move against Hue. Vietnam at 64,800 as of Thursday. President Nixon ordered American strength dropped to below 49,000 by June 30. An average of more than 2,601l U.S. troops must be pulled out each week to meet that deadline. Since the command issued its weekly strength report , another mo Marine airmen have been added to the Vietnam rolls, military sources said. One South Vietnamese victory was reported -in Binh Dinh Province in the coaslal highlands near Qui Nhon. Government lroops there recaptured Combat Base Salem Sunday v.·ithout ma- jor opposition. It v.·as the southernmost Communist posit ion in that province where they control most of the northern portion. Dispatches from Hue aaid the Com· munists, using a larie number of lhe Soviet-built PT76 tanks. croes the My Chanh River about a half mUe aoutb of the Van Trinh Bridge, three mllu tn from the seacoast. Allied soorcea uld there was heavy fighting. All of the area -as was Quing Tri to the north -is in range of U.S. 7th Fleet destroyers and cruisers equipped with mis.sties and 5-6-and ~inch shells. Allied officials said 1t seemed po9sibte the Communists were trying to establiab a bridgehead across the river in prepara· lion for the as.sault on Hue but that today's strikes were not accompanied by lhe normal heavy artillery barra&l'!I uaed in previous assaults. They uid only four to six: rounds of 130MM artillery fell Jn that area today. The North Vietnames'! increased their pressu"re 12 miles west · o( Hue and car· ried out sharp attack:; near Kontum in the Central Highlands, at' An Loe 60 miles north of Saigon, and in the Mekong Delta. !''First Defense Witness South Vietnamese put Communist losses in those actions at 937 men, in· eluding 2.3 tanks on the Hue ·defense perimeter. Recounts Davis Lunch Hanoi Radio reported more intense U.S. air strikes against North Vietnam .today and-said U.S. Navy planes on Sun- day resumed mining of Haiphong Harbor, There was no confinnation of the reports by the U.S. command but the Pentagon has made it clear in public statements it is the U.S. intent to keep Haiphong Harbor inoperable. The command did say it withdrew 600 American servicemen from Vietnam last week, but another 400 Marine fliers entered the war zone. The net withdrawal of 200 Americans was the smallest since the last week of January, 1971, when there were no pullouts. It left U.S. troop stren&f:h in I I SAN JOSE (AP ) -The first defense witness took the witne ss stand today at the Angela Davis murder·kidna~n­ spiracy trial and testified that the black militant v.·as with her in San Francisco when the prosecution claims she was visiting San Quentin Prison. Susan Castro, a founder of the Soledad Brothers Defense Committee. said she lunched in San Francisco with Miss Davi1 on Aug. 5, 1970, two days before a bloody Marin County courthouse escape attempt in which four persons died. Mrs. Castro, whose testimony ended speculation that the defense would rest without calling a single witness, said the luncheon took place at the home of Mi11 Davis' longtime friend Juanita Wheeler. After the luncheon, Mrs. Castro said she and Miss Davis drove to a San Fran- cisco apartment and met with Jonathan Jackson, one of those who was killed two days later. A San Quentin Prison guard had testified for the prosecution that Miu Davis and Jonathan Jack.son came to the prison that afternoon, and that Jonathan visited his older brother Gears•, one ot the so-called Soledad Brother1. The prosecuUo111 contends that ,MJu Davis, 21, bolJlht four 1un1 Ind htlpod Jonatho n Jackoon plot th6 tte6po at. tempt because •he wu Jn love with George Jack!On Ind hoped to obtain iu. freedom . (See eviler atory, Paee 5). $11 .SO to $/l \\e fit these Stride Rites as if opr own kids were going to wear them. Stride Rites are built to fit And our professiona l fitters are !rained to make doubly sure they do. St ride Rite. The most !rusted name in-children's shoes: Cii10ERm® ~ SHOI $10.50 '" fW ' ...... • WE CARRY a lO Ell 54 FASHION ISLAND NEWl'ORT CENTER • 644-4221 U.. -M-~ e l•U-.1""'4 e -... .. 111 c...,._ ' ·':"-- ... By CHARLES W. BELL VATICAN CITY (UPI J -Sh<>utln~ "l am Je5us Oirist," 1 be1rded. long·hl1!ed man leaped a barritr in front of Mlchelang!lo's Pitta and before th! hor· rifled eyes of Sunday tourists r!peatedly smash!d the pricel!Ss masterpiece v.·ith a hammer . The stunning vandalism was a crime v.ritbout precedent at the Vatican and with few precedents anywhere in the modern worl d. The marble statue at St. Peter's Basilica of the Madonna cradling the crucified Jesus is one of the world 's most famous and treasured works of art. Most of the blows found their mark . Succt!sive !wings knocked off the Madoona's n01e, smashed her left eYe. cUpped the left 1lde of her marble veil and Iin111ly knocked off her left ann just above the elbow. Vatican offlcla\1 called the damage serious, but said they hoped to restore the Pieta quickly. The conceded it would never look the same again. The only similar case inside St. Peter's in modem times occurred ln 1989 when a German too.rial, saying he wanted to pro- test against nuclear arms, smashed the marble finger! on the left hand of a statue of Pope Pius VJ beneath the basilica's main altar. Not even Pope Paul Vt was told about the Plet.a until after he appeared at noon at his windew overlooking St. Peter's Square to bless tourists and pilgrims. When he heard the new1 , he traveled down into the basilica in a private elevator with a gold satin throne to 1ee the damage lnnicted on the only piece of art ever signed by the g e n i u 1 Michelangelo Buonarroti. It waa there he heard the name of the rusty-haired, rusty-bearded man with the hammer -Lazslo Toth, 33, a Hungarian· born cltlUn Of Australia who described himself as a geolog ist. The Piela la a majestic thing. a slightly Iarger·than-life sculpture weighing 6.700 pounds and portraying the Madonna cradJln& the body of Jesus after the cruclltxlon. It occupied a place of honor in the world's biggest Christian church , in the first chapel to the right u visitors en· tered through the great ma in bronze doon. Not even a Pope would UJurp it.a place. Only once since Michelaneelo signed and completed it in 1499 had the Piela left St. Peter'' -tor JI months in the mid·lMOs while It was OD e1hiblt at the New York World'• Falr1 . ' ~ ' • UPI T11•,holo MICHELANGELO'S PIETA IN ST. PETER'S BASILICA WAS ATTACKED SUNDAY BY AN AUSTRALIAN Shouting 'I Am Jesus Christ' Suspect Took Sl1d91h1mmtr To M1donn1 Fig ur• 1t Church Antiwar Slogans At P entagon- But No Blockade WASHINGTON (AP ) - A group of an· tiwar protesters demonstra ted at the Pentagon toda y but did not blockade the giant Defense Department headquarters as they had threatened to do. Federal workers and uniformed military -officers arrived et work unimpeded while the demonstrators .11at on the sidewalk across the slreet from the Ma'JI entrance. Mping to be joiTied by others from Washington just across the Potomac River. Shortly before 9 a.m., however , urged on by a young man who complained that demonstrators would get no attention from news media if they just sat there, a group of about 100 formed a large circle in the street and began chanting antiwar • alogans. The circle gradually &pread acl'OS! the 11treet and police then descended from the steps in a single line and advanced. Secret Service 'Pages' Nixon Threat Suspect RED~fOND, Ore. (U PI) -When the Secret Service wanted to arrest a man for allegedly threatening the life of Presi- dent Nixon Sunday, they had him paged over a public address system set up for campaigning Sen. George McGovern. Albert J. Meglitsch, 80, who was taken into custody, was in a crowd of 400 waiting for McGovern to arrive for a speech. The Secret Service handed a note IN SHORT ••. to the master of ceremonies directing Meglitsch to go to the airport gate where he was arrested. He was taken to Deschutes County jail where he was held without bail pend ing an appearance today in federal court in Portland, Ore. in mid-Atlantic Thursday to await four anny bomb disposal experts who were parachuted to the ship. e Art Theft Eyed WORCESTER, Mass. (AP} -Three men and a .woman have been arrested in connection with a $1 million art theft at the Worcester Art-i\iumrrn, but p<Jlice say they h:lve not recovered the four stolen. paintings. ltfeanwhile, police reported Sunday that seven paintings valued at $42,000 were stolen from Deerfield Academy, at Deerfield, Mass. There was no indication that the two incidents were related. Deerfield police said the paintings were by Frency impressionist Camille Pissarro and 18th century American portrait painter John Singleton Copley. Police said the small paintings, each about a foot wide. were taken late last week from the Frank L. Boyden Library. Trio Involved? BELFAST (UPI) -Dozen.1 of ptrsons were injured today in two separate in· cidents o( bomb! exploding in parked cars. A British army spokesman :said the first blast, which injured nearly 60 persons, was the work of the Irish Republican Army (IRA ). An army spokesman said a 150-pound bomb blast in an industrial area or North Belfast sent at least 49 people to the hospital suffer ing from cuts, bruises and 1hock. Witnesses at the scene said many were seriously hurt. The bomb exploded in the car at the Jennymount Industrial Estate parking lot. The spokesman accu!ed the IRA of misleading security officials on the loca· lion and liming of the bomb in a telephoned warning. He aaid the caller \Varned the bomb would of off in 30 min· utes but the blast came 10 minute1 after the call as the area swarmed wit.h-fleting people and troops trying ta evacuate them. "This 1eems a deliberate IRA attempt to cause the maximum casualties in a Protestant area," the army spokesman said . The residenUal zone around the in- dustrial complex is mostly Protestant. The second blast came in a parked ca r in ~1aghera, County Londonderry, 40 mi les northwest of Belfast. The explosion slightly injured two civilians and a Bri tish soldier. 11 "'recked the front of the local branch of the Ulster Bank and damaged 15 shops, the army said. A spokesman said troops recogni1ed the car as one used in the hold-up of a nearby village post office earlier, became auspicious and cleared the area before the bomb went off. !J'he army said the IRA catler tn-·the Belfast bombing further tried to deceive security men ·by warning the explosive was planled inside a furniture fa ctory in the industiral complex. "We naturally concentrated on clearing the factory," the army spokesman :said. "But v.·e moved the evacuees through the car park. Thank God most v.·ere out of the park before the explosion or the casualties would have been murderous." The blast wrecked 10 cars and trucks in the parking lot, shattered the furniture factory ne:rt to It and smashed hundreds of windows; be said. DAME MARGARET RUTHERFORD British Actress, 80, 011d Britisli Actress Daine Rutherford Succumbs at 80 LONDON (AP ) -Dame ~1argaret Rutherford , character actress known throughout the v.·orld for her movie portrayals of eccentric Englishwomen, died today, her agent reported. She was 80 . As the mult irhin ned epitome of the up- per-class Englishwoman in tweeds. she was a favorite on both sides of the Atlan· tic and won a Hollywood Oscar as tht duchess in "The V.I.Ps." Dame 1t1argaret suf~ered a hip fracture last year. her second in six years, and was hospitalized for six: months. Shi returned to her home I n Buck· inghamshire early this year. "ft was the complications that always set in with old people after a seriow ~all that really caused her death,'' said her agent. Dorothy Mather. ~1iss ~1ather said the funeral would be Thursday at Gerrard·s Cross, in Ox- fordshire. 1t1iss Rulh,rford made her stage debut In 1925 at lhe Old Vic. One of her first big hits "'as as Madame Arcarti. the bicycl- ing med ium in Noel Coward 's "Blithe Spirit," \l.'hich she played on the London stage and in the film . When it went to New York. the Pieta was tranaported in a bulletproof, unslnkable steel crate weighing six tons and was insured for $10 million. It wu a symbolic rij;ure because. art experts said the Pieta was priceless. The demonstrators fell back to the sidewalk and remained there, confronting the row of police. ·Jn this initial encounter there ap- parently was no violence and a demonstrator was heard congratulating the group because "You got the word aero Es and nobody got hurt." e Prescott 'Battle' Over ' PRESCOTI. Ariz. (AP) -The "Bat· lie" fire is now a name in a record book and a giant black scar on the side of the Bradsha1v Mountain soulh east of here. Fire crews began mopup operations of the 28,400 acre blaze Sunday, one week afte r the fire broke out on Battle Flats. Wallace Suspect Linked She first visited the United States In 1947 v.•ith John Gielgud, playing Lady Bracknell in 1'The Importance of Being Earnest." Her hold on ...the American public was st rengthened in the succession of great postwar British film comedies that included "Blithe Spirit," "Passport to Pimlico," "Miranda." "The Happiest Da ys of Your Life'' and "The Importance of Being Eames!." When it returned in 1965, Pope Paul 11id it would never leave again. The statue and all other art treasures ln the Vatican were insured in 1968, but the Vatican never announced the evalua· lion of various masterpieces there, ··u was fan tastic how it happened ," aaidl Francesco Ticinese, who was stan· ding with a group of Dutch tourists in front of the statue. "It wa! so quick," he said. ''Suddenly that man was on the statue, just hitting away with a hammer ." Or. Seymour Fisher. UJs Angeles, said he counted about 1ix hammer blows. most of them almed at the faet: of the Madonna . About siJ men leaped to pull Toth down and some witnesses said some of the men and women who saw the attack wanted to lynch him. "Everyone was stunned," said Fisher. ''Then I heard someone crying . No screams or shouting or anything like that. Just one person crying." Vati can guards and tourists pulled and wre stled Toth away and placed him in a makeshift cell . The Vatican closed its tiny prison in 19M. More than eight hours later, VaUcan authorities handled Toth over to llalian official!, who said he faced !everal charges, provided magistrates decide he is legally sane. Under a 1929 agreement. Ita lian courts try perf.ons cfiarged with committing crimes in the Vatican, rrovided the Vatican requests this. It did in Toth's case. As Italian plice took him into custody, Toth shouted : "I did it because Jesus' mother does not exist . t am Jesus. I am Michelangelo.'' Across the Potomac Ri ver from the Pentagon. an estimated 400 protestors voted to march across Memorial Bridge and protest at the military complex. They were met at the edge of a federal park by 15 mounted National Park policemen. Through a police loudspeaker, the demonstrators were told a parade pennit would oot permit them ta match to the Pentagon until 7 a.m. PDT. At that point the proteater11 saL down and began to sing . About 7:45 a.m. PDT the main body of demonstrators reached the Pentagon and gathered in the street in front of the mall entrance. Almost immediately police charged in~ to the group pu shing them back to the middle of the street. The police then formed a line down the middle of the street allowing the demonstrators to niove no further toward the entrance where two more rows of guards stood ready. DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Delivtry of the Dally Piiot Is guarantetd Mond1y.Frld1y: II '!"OU do ll01 11111• YoUf' l><!li>er nr ,,30 om, c111 11\d vour co~ wlrl be bro119ft! 10 yOll. C11l1 ••• Itkin 11n1~ 1:l0 o,m, S.lurcl•Y ~nd Surlll•Y : ti you dG llOI •«•!,,. lour cooy by t 1.m, 51lllrd1y, or I '·""· 1'!1dly, U ll I /Id I CODY Wiii bl bl'Ough! 10 YO\I, C1111 ••• l•-•n u11111 10 1.m. Ttl,phon!s Motl Or111§1 Co1m!y ~'1!11 •..•.•.. '42-"'1 Nortllwt11 ~u11!l~;ton Bo1d1 l!ld W11?mln1lfr • . ...... .,. J40-112t 141n Cltl'lltntl, t1Dlstr1M1 B•1cll, Sill Jut /I t10011r1no. 01n1 "01111, SOUlll L11un1, L111un1 Nt11111 ..•• 4n""'° Residents of the summer communities of Breezy Pines and Walker were allowed to return to their cabins Sunday night. Ten cabins, including seven in the Breezy Pines area, were destroyed in the blaze . Officials said roadblocks to the Pine Flats area remained up longer to allow fire crews to complete extinguishing the blaze .. e Prisoner Roundup NEW ORLEANS (UPI) -Fourteen prisoners cut a hole in the ceiling of th eir cell , crawled to the roof of the four·story Orleans Parish Prison and lowered themselves to freedom Sunday, using a rope made of mattress covers. By early today, six had been recair tured and eight were still at large. The 14 jailbreakers were in a "dormitory cell" awaiting trial on various charges, mostly narcotics viola· tlons. Two of them broke into a young woman's apartment and held her and her two children hostage until police came to her rescue 12 hours J8ter, Police said after the entire group of prisoners broke out of jail at 3 a.m. Sun- da y, two of them, David Hayes, 30, and Gerald Allen. 22, broke into the apart· ~ ment of Yolanda Temple, 24, and threatened to kill her and the children. e Queen Salb Again SOUTHAMPTON, England (AP) -The liner Queen Elizabeth 2 sails again for New York tod ay after an eastbound transatlant.ic crossing delayed seven hours by a bomb scare. Announcing that its 65,()()().ton flagship was sticking to its schedule, the Cunard Steamship Co. refused to say what extra precautions were being taken to guard the ship. The QE2 docked Sunday at Southampton, its home port after halting Warmer Weather Remains Mostly Fllir; Showers in W1,..,., Wlll'IY V411htr II rtl\ll'lllllf t11 loutllfr11 C•lllOrfll• '"'' • -ktllO doM f!I 1111111•-blY Cold ll"liM•t turM. ..,..."*' tertc11hlrs wv. I~ k1r -tt•lr l'llOl'fll"9 <IOWt •lent 111a co.11. 11o11J wm 111 ci.1r ...,..,.,. T~v. wltol ""'"'''""' rltlrw h1te tha IGt, !ht Niii-i Wit· "* lef"llU .. yt. A Cetd ftotll &reulll! llMI 11111 - .. fl'IWlllllll ...... O¥tl' "" ..... k~ allf tr.c11 o1 ••111 le dreutllt ... rcl\ff '°""*'" Ctt!lornl1, Tlft'l11tr1tur11 llflv. ..... fll tl'lt tot In IN l&wi1!111t, T ... 'f', lllfl'I 111 Lot ilillo-i•t WH tl• ,_ ..... NKl'I 1S. '" T11eH111 ''"'° ,.,,"'"9 wllt ell• \1110 1111 ml«Oa Ill C09ttlf lfld lll~lllt Vi tllYt, ... .........,._ .. .,... v.s. , .......... Pacific Northwest, Plains '"' 1111 "•cillc Norlhoqtt. "'°" of "" NflOl'I ••v lll'ldtr l•fr IO <IOUCly 1klt1. Ttmw•turtt lod1y 1r1 1•1!t'(lfd 10 '"ell lllt tot or '°' from ll>t 51111111. lltffl 11'11• lht Mhtwt•I. Ma,.. mGC1tr1t1 '-"'~r1lu•1• 1r1 ••111Cftod lfl 11\f rll11 ol I~ COlllllry. E1rlr 'Nltl'lll'O ltm~r1lur•1 ••'Ill• fl'Ot'l'I ,1 dtt'"' At 11!'¥•n11on, Wyo., to 1' d-Or"• 11 D1ll•1. Ttt, Con•tnl Weather $11nny tOdfy, Ll11h! 111rltbl1 wllllft n!Ohl •r.d mOl'flll'lt h01'rs blc!l"'ll>ll' Wtll•rly I f1) II It/IOI\ 11'1 l llltl\OOf\\ tod1y i nd Tu-t~1y, HIOll !CICiiy to Co11111 tll'llMl1111r11 ''"" from .so to n. lflllnd flmlltf•tu••• r111111 Ir- • t. 1 .. W1l1r lll'llltl'flll"" ,,, S1tn, Moon, Tfdes MOMOAY . •. 6.ts ""'· J,I TUIJOAY ,1n1 111t11 .. . ••• r·u • "'· J.I ,,,.., IC'W •. ' •• , .• 1:40 1 111. 1.7 l«fll'ld lllfll . • , . 1:ZJ ID.Ill. J.J ...... low ' 1t:J3 ll.l'I\. '' S\lll l lm l~f4 1"" S1h 7:So111.1t1. °''Ooft I t.fttl J 11 9."1, Stft t :i. • 191, With Mystery Meeting She was an obvious choice to create Miss Jane lt-tarple. Agatha Oiristie's amateur detective. for the movies, and played her in ''Murder at the Gallop," "Murder She Said." "Murder Most Foul" and "Murder Ahoy." MILWAUKEE (AP) - A Milwaukee ferry manager says Arthur H. Bremer appeared as a swarthy, well-dres~ed companion to arrange the first of three mysterious trips Bremer made across Lake J\.1ichigan in the weeks preceding the "'ounding of Gov. George C. Wallace. Bremer, 21, is charged with shooting \Va\lace on May 15. Moun ting evidence indicates he follov.·ed the Alabama governor for more than two months. Records of the Chesapeake & Ohio Railr oad in Milwaukee show that Bremer took the C&O ferry from Milwaukee to Ludington , Mich., on April 9 and May 9. Reco rds in Ludington show he made the 97·mile trip in the opposite direction on April 28. The C&O ferry-trainmaster, Earl S. Nunnery, told The Associated Press he recalls that Bremer and a man who ap· peared to be of Greek descent made ar· rangements for the ferry trips. A third person was traveling with the men but did not enter the ferry office, Nunnery said . This \\las the first reJX>rt that Bremer had had companions in the weeks preceding the shooting. Acquaintances ha ve desc ribed him as a solitary, virtually friendless figure. FBI agents questioned Nunnery anrl ex· amined ferr y records following the ferry manager's interview with the AP . The FBI has repeatedly declined comment on its in vestigations. Bremer had been seen in Milwaukee at a \Volla ce celebration just 2Y, blocks from hi s apartment on April 4, the night of the \Visconsin primacy~ lt wa.s in_the next da y or two, accordiag to Nunnery, that Bremer appeared at the ferry office on the ?\.1ilwauktt docks with the uniden· tified man. ' O.K. I pt0mise! If we'/9 not Mjoying aurse/vtlS, we11 leave 911rJy.' - NClnnery said Bremer's companio n talked excitedly about moving a political campaign from \Visconsln to Michigan, but never named a candidate. "This is what made the whole thing so impressive on me -the Grttk telling me how hard he 's working in thl! field ," Nunnery said. "It !Ounded like he was taking a whole group from Wisconsin to Michiga n. Some were going to dri-ve and some ny." \\lhen they left. Nunnery aaid , he peeked out his office window hoping to see a bumper sticker or some other insignia on their car identifying the candidate they 1\•ere supJX>rting. There were no visible signs. he said, but recalled seeing a third person sitting in the back !eat, slight of build and with ha ir long enough sn he could no\ determine whether the person was a man or a woman . A long-haired young man of slight build came with Bremer to a gas station near Bremer's home at least twice in recent weeks to have tires repaired. according to a station mechanic, Jerry Stone. Nunnery !aid he told Bremer and the other man that he could not make ad· vanee reservalions at this time of year. \Vilhin another day or two, Bremer registered at !he Wald orf-Astoria Hotel in New York City and was there April 7·8, according to hotel records. Yet by the evening of April 9, Bremer was back in Milwaukee in time to catch the 8: 15.p.m. ferry for the six-hour trip ta Ludington. Ferry records list his name and the license number of his 1967 blue Rambler. now impounded in Maryland. Records on the Ludington side of Lake ,. Michigan list Bremer as returning to J\.lilwaukee on the s:of p.m. frrry April- 28 . Between lhrse '"''o ferry trips -on April 15 -Bremer was ticketed for 1peeding In Binghamton. N.Y. The Baltimore Sun reported that. at 2: 15 a.m. on April 15, Bremer checked in· lo the Sheraton Motor lnn in New Car- rollton, Md., 1 IS.minute drive from the Ulur'I Shopping Center where Wallaee was shot. The Sun said Bremer st1ytd three days and tried to ch!Ck in again the lllttkend ' before the 11hootlng but was told the motel was fill~. Sen. Hubert H. Humghrey\. another Dtmocratlc pre.'1den· tlal candidate, "ttended a pnlltlcal bre1kht~t ln the motel that morning . On May 9, Bremer took his third f,rry trip. arrivfng in Ludington about noon . Ht was spotted at mldaflernoon tM following day In Cadllloc, Mich .. 12 mil" I from Ludington, where Wallace wu to \ 1pe1k at an eve.nlng rally. ~ In 1967. Queen Eliza beth II made her a Dame of the British Empire, the female equivalent of knighthood . Actor Stringer Davis was her husband. ~larine General Dies CHRISTCH URCH. Va . (AP ) -Marine Brig . Gen. Robert Latane Montague, 75, of Urbanna. died Friday. Montague won a b11ttlefield commission in World War J, and served in World War If. He was 1 White House aide under Presidents Calvin Colidge and Herbert Hoover. ~l , Ul'IT ....... Bonoh1lu Winner Tanya Wilson of Hawaii, lj. foot·8, brown.eyed blonde who took lhe Mlss U.S.A. crown over the ~·eekend, said abe and 11 other finalist.! heard the bomb blast.! at the Cerro. ! IJ• was · ... n at a Dairy Que.ft drive-In •bout! p.m. by an IJ.y .. Mld tilgh scllool girl, report<dly "" 1potted at an inn. between• and e p.m., and wu seen by ai least threo penom and photographed a\ the Wallace rolly when bo sat In tbe third ...... mar Beach Hotel while the ' 'were parading In iW!msul~ before the Judgu. She saJd she wu too busy thlnklna about the pagunt to 1tt ap. set about It. • \' \' _,,_ .. -r-• ~-.'" ..., "' -., .,--,.. .----r .,.. --.,. .- , Orange Coast Teday's Flilal 3 N.Y. Steeb vor. 65, NO. I.\], 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES Harbor By MLL1AM SCHREIBER Of tl!t Diiiy Pli.t Slaff HIQ;bor Island residents are girding for a legaJ battle over lease agreements which have allowed them to landscape and improve tidelands around their is-land. Residents of the exclusive Newport Beach community have developed the land below the mean high tide line since making a 1943 agreement with the city. Most tidelands in and around Newport • Harbor have been tra.11.Slerred to city « county control at the pleasure of the state of Ca1ifornia. Some state tidelands were turned over to county control aod others to the city ol. Newport Beach. The Q.Uestion of which tideland!: are controlled by the city and which by the county has been wtcler contention from time to time over the years and in~ volves some complex legal questions. Now Orange County has told Newport Beach it had no business leasing the IXOll County Speech Death Ban · Vote Urged by Reagan By TOM BARLEY Of llM DlllY l'Utt llllf Gov. Ronald Reagan today In Anaheim urged "every Californian with a con- acitnet" to sign a petition that would put the restoration of capital puni!hment in- ltlative on the ballot in November. Reaigan told the annual meeting of the californJa Police Offlciers Association in l>isoeyland Hotel 11111 "the llate ow .. )IOU the fullest protection· Ill a,duty that dally becoma more ~111. "I W lbat lJs lawmeD were tilled In lhe line of duly in this countcy last year. Twenty·three lawmen and correctional officen have died in California !lince January, 1971," Reagan said. "One is: too many ," Reagan declared to the cheers of the standing lawmen. "I want a mandatory first degree murder trial for 1nyooe who kills a police officer," the governor said. "A bill to this effect bas passed the state Senate and is now before the Assembly and I urge the support of every Californian for this vital measure." Reagan told more than 500 top California lawmen that the s t a t e Supreme Court threw out more than 200 years of legal precedent when it dumped the death penalty earlier this year. "It reversed its own decision on the same case four years ago and did nothing by its very act to restore any standing it ever had with the people of California," Reagan !aid. The governor 11aid another top priority of Califomlarui "both In terms of pro- tecting the public and easing the burden on lawmen" was a long overdue crackdown on pushers and dealers in drugs and narcotics. "More than 99,000 adults and 36,00> minors were arrested for drug offenses in 1970," Reagan said. ''More than 1,000 deaths in Los Angeles County alone were caused in that year by drug addiction." Reagan called for a "stiff upward revision" of the jail term meted out lo drug dealers and public support for what he called "a new and comprehensive drug abuH tnatmenl program ... that will divert the first time mer or possessor of drugs away from our jails and prbons." Reagan' said participants in the unique program.1'ill be given the opportunity "lo &hare in treatment programs designed to keep them from becoming addicted and restore them to a normal productive place in society.'' Reagan aaid be particularly welcomed what will be "the ma,,sive use of citiztn volunteers to help meet 1 mounting social problem. "We hope that we can reach the poten- tial young addict far more effectively than any institutional nbabilitation pro- (S.. REAGAN, p,,. I) Gherman Eniers ·innocent J?lea In Swindle Cme Dr. E. :P.fortimer Gbennan, Barry Goldwater Jr.'s father-in-law, and two associates has pleaded innocent in con- nection with land swindle charges filed by the San Bernardino district attorney's of- fice. Dr. Gherman, a prominent Newport Beach businessman, John A. "Pat" Pat· lerson, and James Moreland, all officials of '-fountain Lakes Devek>pment Corp., were released on $10,1»> bail Friday, each pending a preliminary hearing June 12 in San Bernardino Superior Court. Dr. Ghennan, whose daughter wed the son or U.S. Sen. Barry M. Goldwater March 30, could not be reached for com- ment on the charges. Neither Patterson nor Moreland were available, either. Telephones at their cfiice in San BernardiJX> have been disconnected. Gherman, Patterson and Moreland were charged Thursday with 10 counts of grand theft in connection with the sale of lot~ near Big Bear known as Mountain View Estates. ln addition, Gherman and Patterson were eached charged with 40 counl3 cf false and ~isleadlng advertising and 19 conuls each of failing to adhere to a California Real Estate Commission order to stop selling the lots. Deputy San Bernardino County District Attorney Charles Wolfe Said today the charges stenuned from a>mplaints in- itiated by the Real Estate Commission. He said the eorporation allegedly sold 135 lots to persons telling them that utilities had been installed, when they hadn't been. Wolfe said the real estate involved was va1\1 at $1.1 million. ORANGE COllNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, MAY 22, 1972 N TEN CENTS Girds for Battle on Leases island tidolands in the first plaC<. De- tailed surveys by the county contend most of Ille tideland> around Harbor Island are really county-controlled. Aerial surveys, which were ordered during th recent county quest for tide- lands use fees; ·showed that a number of improvements-incllJ(iing hall of a awb:n- ming pool ·built two years 1go -are encroaching ' ilito county~laimed tldf.. tands. Most of the development C<lnslsts of walkways, patios and erteo.sive landscap- ing. The pool, owned by Marshall Mor- gan of 12 l!artor Wand, is split dQWll the middle by the mean high tide line. No one, including county and city offi- cials, is quite sure how the tidelands situation developed in ilie! first pl.ace. "I really Couldn't hatard a guess," said Larry Leaman, chief of operaticns for the Orange County harbors, beaches and parks department. ''I would Otiak. though, that the error 1. was pinpointed when beUer mapping aod survey techniques became available," he said. ''Also, it is possible the configura- tion of the jsland changed a bit." City Harbor and Tidelands Administra- tor George Dawes said he first noticed the ownership discrepancy. "The lease had expired and I was studyin& maps o{ the area when I noticed the error," he said. "But l have no way of knowing ho\v the mistake was made in the first place." · "This whole issue ls so lnvolved that it is bird lo tell who made the inltial urors that gav1 the land to the city," he added . "Harbor Island is a unique situation in this case since it is the only developed lidelands area \l·e are concerned with," Leaman said. The problem with encroaclunents on county. city and state lldelands and (See TIDELANDS, Page Z) At Dinner. Re~eption In Moscow MOSCOW (UPll -President Nixon told Kremlin leaders tonight they together can make peaceful cooperation a reality during their summit t.llks this week. "Because we are both prepared to pro- reed on the basis of equality and mutua.I respect, we meet 1 moment when we can make peaceful cooptratlon a reality," Nixon said. The President made the llatement In 1 toast tonight at a lavish lllte clin1111: In ,-honor of him. Mn. Nimn and hl.s ollldal PlrlJr four hours alter his arrival in Moooow tor a Weel: of oummlt talb. The artlval rtoepllon was friendly but restrained. Crowds, largely 1llent. watched a motorcade on the 17-mile trip from Vnukovo Airport to the Grand Kremlin Palace, where the dinner al.so was held. PllEsm°ENT NIXON .AND SOVIET PRESIDENT -~ ltEFTl IN MOSCOW :&.ljht MOm.i.t" $hared AfNI' l'rftliNnt's ArrlvOI at Vnukovo II Airport .,.,...,.... Nixon 's plane arrived five minutu 1head of the scheduled • p.m. landing. The weather was humid, tbe skie.s gray. The Soviet <>fficials were anhnai.Jlr friendly for this first visit in peacetimt-fO Rus,,ia by a U.S. President. It was late afternoon when the Presi-- dent arrived, and he, Mrs. Nixon and (lther members of the official U.S. party were guests at the lavish dinner by their hoSLs in the Hall of Facel3 of the Grand Kremlin Palace where the Nixon.s art 1taying. .. Parking Ordillance Action Facing Newport Council A proposed ordinance that would ban overnight parking of commercial vehicles more than 20 feet long on city street! ts one Qf a half-Oozen major items facing Newport Beach councilmen tonight. The parking ordinance has been N!vised so that it does not cover travel trailers and other recreational vehicles. Also before the council at its 7:30 p.m. m,.ting In city. hall: -Tough regulations ioverning the amount o( customer parking apace stores and offices in Industrial (manufacturing) zones must provide. -Adoption of the Interim Park Plan proposed by the city Parks, Beaches and Recreation Commission and approved by planning coDlJTlissjoners. -A companion measure to Orange Cc?unty's . newly~adopted ordinance re· quiring boal.s in Newport ~r lo have holding ·tank>. -Adoption ol a poliq rqarding the future or the city's library sysUm - determining W~r to ezpand the branch library program or, aa library trustees want, endorsement ot a new central library. -An appeal by lhe Pacific Coast Man- ufacturing company or planning com· mission rejecticm of a 1.0ne change to allow construction of a nine-hole goll course at the top end of Upper Newport Bay. ' ; 'I 200 Arrest,ed l1i Storming Of Pentagon WASHINGTON (AP) -Demonstrators attempted to enter the Pentagon today, shortly after their legal permit to dem- onstrate expired but were repulsed by police. About 100 building guards pushed back the head or the ragged column of pro- tester• and began making arrests:. Among those taken into custody were an. tiwar leaders David Dellinger and Father James Groppl. (See earUer story, Page 4). At first there was Jittle violence u guards blocked the forward pusb and began bau1lng orf demonstrators one by ooe. But as the effort continued, guards were seen dragging AOme demonstrators to a waiting bus by the hair. Police Mid more than 200 demonatr• tors were arrested. His face-to.face talks with Brezhney and the other Soviets btgln Tuesday morning. In his dinner toast, Nixon said the eyes of the world are focused on the possibility of a Soviet-American agreement to limit strategic nuclear arms. "An agreement in thls area could begin lo tum our countries away from 1 wasteful and dangerous arms race and toward more production for peace," he said. An hour after ltis arrival 1n Moscow Nixon slipped into a Kremlin ofnce and spent 45 minutes alone -except for two translators -with Leonid J. Brezhnev, secretary general of the Soviet Conr munist party, the acknowledged Soviet leader, Russian sources told UPI cor· respondent Henry Shapiro. Reporters aet0mpanying the NixoM estimated the crowds en route to the Kremlin from the airport at about 100,000 -fairly '111all by Moocow stancl- (See NIXON, P1,. ZI .Big -Crime 'on Last Legs' The overnig_ht _parking ordinance,. originally scheduled to include recrea- tioflal vehicles, was changed because of pending !late legblalion that would pre- empt municipal bans. "There is a law now proposed that would stop cJUu from controlling o,,.. street parkh'll of vehicles licensed by the stata," Rid City Attorney l>ennia O'Neil. Leaders of the demonstration using a megaphone repeatedly urged the uowd to move forward "fently 1 n d persistently" and not attempt to storm the building. Weadler Kleindienst Says Victory over Rackets Imminent Crediting eledionlc s u r v e i 11 an c e techniques '"the lnft'tr, Ading U.S. A~ torney General Richard Kleindienst today predicted that America will cripplt and totllly control organlted crime within three to four years. . . He did not mention any mecillc ethnic groups or Individuals, but le'tt ]l'tlle doubt in bis references during the Clllfornla Peace Officers' Association convention •peech el the l>l•neyland Hotel. "A himdf'ul of callous, evit, avaricious men wbo think nothing of murder, U• torUon. and pujury have bec:;:me a I!:°"" ;ng malignancy In American "\ocldy, he cledartd. ___ , b thi ''But . musurts pr~ 1 5 AclmlniitraUoo 11110"i which ,,_ ourvelllance a,.,.. p-Ornlncntl1 baft put 1,IOO of -top crime °"""' out of businw," Kleindienst charged. "We have eliminated half of the leadership of 'the famlllt1' Ind II Is my prtdlcllon that in three lo four run we will have tbiJ cancer completeiy· under our control/' lie added. Kleindienst Rid he dllfered with Gcvernor Reagan's earlier appeal for the rtStoraUon of the death penalty "In the sense that I believe we can only have limited capital punishment whether It be in Cillfornia or anywhere t.lse. "By that I mean the d01th penalty for poIIUcal •unwfutlon, the kllllnc of 111 m duty police officer and the m1jor1ty ol p-tmedltated murdor," KleindlemtAld. "I don't belle-.. ud l never ban that we can Include crtmu of puslon in the category ""1><alecl todl)' bJ C6v. "Reqan,.. the actlaC flclenl ......., pntral Aid. Kleindienst predicted the d e c II n e ''wlUiln 1 very few y an" of Ute drug ptoblems "thal have acbievlcl 111ch -proportlblla-ln -IOCltly lo-ci.I). . "It Ls my belief that the Vietnam War which has so dlotressed the Y"'1b of our nation has been 1 prime factor in so many young people lurnlnl lo drugs " an escape," Kleind.iemt ..gt lie blamed "a nailon tbal "nl 500,000 young men w1l9 were never told why they were there 1,000 miles lo fight a wer while the people at home were told that that war dldri'i uilt!' Bui Kl~ fell that the "Inevitable IOlutlon" of tbat...,..,,m ueher in an tra In which yoimc people Wf1I turn from clrui• with IIioi reooo>lllon that "they hmo become -If tlio lfdlesl evlll Jn OW' IOCltty." The I1w would void ordfnancts m·c1tie1 such u Anaheim. San Marino and Long Beach, O'N•ll said. · 11Thert'1 no me adopting an crdinance thll l.s (ll1)ne lo be wiped out by the lllte in I few months," O'Nell.aald. "'Besides. recreational vehiclu IJ"eJl1t the big problem, IV1 the large lru<b, tree-trimming rip, and that oort of thing, that Ls tho rtaI·problem," O'Neil .. id. He said the l'Ovi.sed ordinance is writ· ten alone the Jina of one now tn effect in Coronado. "And It can be'JUstllled oo Ulning prin- ciple!, •· O'{lfell Nici. O'NelLArplalned that by ualng the meaSllllftienl of 20 fee~ pickup tl11cks, 11lotion wagOl'll, aman vw and the like with commercial IIconM plateJ would be exempt.. He uid the. onllnanct would 11.so u · tlude tnJtb •std on comtruclloo Job!. Only a fraction of the group tried lo enter the bu,Uding. They were stopped in the middle of the·llreet ooulde. Another group 11t down ln the street. while still others slooil · ulde ' and watched. A few rocks were thrown from the crowd In the dlrtdlcin of· guards 1nd newsmen stanCUng On the Pentagon 1tepa. OUtskte the u.sault zone. 'two Vietnam Veterans Agaln!t the1War tKrned a green army coat and 1 green 1rmy 1blrt to the cheers of the crowd. '"I111t11 four ytars of my life aotng up fn Oamet,'' one o: them said 11 the crowd ••I 01u macadam parking lot<>111Jlde tho bulldlng. Algeria Has-Visitor ALGIERS, Algtrta (AP) -Pmldont Habib lloJriulba ol TllnlJla mivtd here loday f« • week'• official -.J.stt. More sunshine on the agenda for Tuesday with conUnued warm temperatures. ~ha at the beaches &: rising to 72 In the inland ....... Lows .a.s:i. INSIDE TODi\ Y The Costa Me.ta Civic Plnv- ho x 1 e and the Himtinuton Btacli PlaVhOIUt both optned their seaJon·clori-na productiom over ihe wetkfnd. Both art ,...., vieuied todat1. See Enhrrlain.- ment, Pagt1 18·19. MllNt , .. ,, "'"""'' ...... .. cw .... c....., ,. 111¥11 l'wtw M ,_,, ..... Sttcll Mlrtt•M t•lt T.._.l.._ '' , •• ,.,. , .. 1, w-. W1t"' ...... ft . ............ , .. ,. --. ' .. ~ NEW VICE CHANCELLOR UCl'1 H111rd Ad1m1 Hazard ·Adams Appointed UCI Vice Cl1ancellor Dr. Hazard Adams, dean of the school of humanities tt UC Irvine, has been ap. pointed vice chancellor of academic af- fairs. ·Announcement ol the action by the UC Board of Regents was made jointly by UC President Charles J. Hitch and UCI Chancellor Daniel G. Aldrich, Jr. Dr. J.dama BUCceedl Dr. Roggtr W, RusseD who resigned to become chief ex· ecuUye ofijcer of Flinders Universicy 0£ South Australia earlier th.is spring. Dr. Adams, an expert on literary theory and 20th Century Anglo.Irish liter~ture, joined the UCI faculty 1n 1964 and serve<J as founding chairman or the department ot. English for five years. He was named dean o·f1iUm3ltities two and one-half years agQ. -Earlier, he had taught at Mi~hlgan State University, Cornell University. and the University of Texas. A graduate of Princeton University, he earned master· of iµ:14. and doctoral de.gree$ at the Univ.ersity of Washington. He· ·is. the ,author of two novels. "The· Truth About Dragons: .An Antl·Romance" and '71\e Horses of Instruction,'' and severil other books, including "Blake and Yeats: The ~Contrary Vision," ''William Blake: A Reildlng of the Shorter Poem•," "The Cont~ of. Poetry" and "The Intert.¢s of .Crlticlatn." Th, .• UC! Friend• or the Library recently selected ·"The Truth about Dra.:oru:'.' as one of the outstanding books written by ·Orange County authors in 1971. Nevada Jud-ge Ref uses License To Bawdyhouse VIRGINIA CITY. Nev. (AP) - A District Court judge.: in thls one.time silver mining community has refused to order licensi~ of a house of prostitution, saying to do so would "demean the stature of the court." Judge Frank Gregory declined to grant a request Iii .a suit filed by Irene York .. who contended' the Storey County Com· mission created a ·monopoly by licensing only one house of prostitution -Joe Con· forte 's well-known and popular Mustang ranch . Gregory noted at the end or a day.Jong hearing Jn the 96-year-old courthouse that the state legislatu re had given countie! "the authority within their discretion to license this s om e w h at disreputable business." He said 1'.1iss \'ork, in effect. asked him to license a house of prostitution. He said he would no{ do so . Storey Dist. Atty. Virgil Bucchianeri, in his closlng arguments, told the cOurt Miss York's action represented prcbably "the first time that someone has asked a court for sanction to operate a brothel." I OlANGE COAST N DAILY PILOT TI-. Or•• C011t O,t,IL'I' fllLOT, with wtlldl I• comlllrttd th• Nrw$-P,...._ la 1111bllthtlf br 11'1• Or•1191 C~11 l"Wlltl\1119 com..,.nr. Sftl,,. r1lt edlHol\$ •r• pUb!l~, MOnd•Y lhr'OUVl'I Frid1y. lor Co1!~ MeJI, NtwPOrf ll••<h, H"'nH1191on f!le1KOh/Fo""1t1n Vet11y, Llllll"• Btl(h, l"'l~Sl<'l<l1'1M<~ •nd S.11 Cr.mtnle/ Sin JWl'I Caplst•11W A ,,..,911 rf9fon.tl •<'lll'tln It w111;~1urd1ri iil'd s~s, The pri..c l°NI Pll\:lllJhlnt 1111111 b 11 JJO Wt1I lUy S1rftl, C'"'9 Mt"'," C•IUorn,,, '1626. RoDert N . W11d Pr1sk11n1 Ind P11Dlhh1r J1c• R. C11rl1v Vl<t Pf"icltnt •nd Gener .. MIN;" Thomet KetYil Ellllor Thom•• A. Mutphi11.• MMqiflO Ellltw L. ~ Kti19 .,...,..., City Elllilot ,. "--·Offko Jfll Ntwpert l•11l1•11I M1m"' i\Ur•111 P.O •••• 117$, t266) --c.• Mtw:. a.-WMI ...., Strn! .......... e.kfl1 lft ,_, ,._ ~'""""" IJHtll: 1111i lllldl lloui.v1N ltfl (tMIM11: XI N9tlh 11 Cimino 1t .. 1 Tot.,._. 17t41 '42 .. JJ1 C ....... A....,..... 642·S671 ~ lf7J,, er.,.. QIS'I l"vtlllthlr!tl eom.."-'• Ne_ tltft .... ~ IU11t!r1!1~ .. !.... ,...,..,. .,. .. .-t1..-11 llereln ,,..., .. ~ •ltlltvl )fl9C:lll ... ~ .. ~, .... . ..... '* ............... c .......... Ci:•INll'ft... ·~ .., urrler Q.U =::Ji-.. .:;t!r/J,;f/,,.;,-· - ...,..... . -·~ . . . . . . ' ~ .. Criminal Cues Split Dec~sions Upheld by Court WAS!llNGTON (UPI) -Tilt supreme Court in a 5-4 vott held today that a state J)1ay permit convictions in criminal cases by less than a unanimous vote of the 12· man juries. The . decis ion came in cases from Loui.!iana and Oregon. U n a n i m o u s \•erdlcts are required in federal courts and most other states. Under Oregon's constitution, 10 of 12 jurors may return a verdict of guilty ez:. cepf in murder casea. The Loulslana practice under both law and the state consUtution allows con- viction by nine of 1% juron, except when the defendant could be sentenced to death in addition. UnanimJty is required in less serious cases tried by five-man juries. Texas, Montana, Idaho and Oklahoma allow 'less than unanimOtll verdicts for minor offenses. · In another case today, the court upheld the constitutionality of federal and state immunity laws used to require a witness to give evidence or face jall for con- tempt. The statues are used as a major weapon in the war on organiud crime. The S.2 ruling came in test cases challenging the immunily provision of the 1970 federal crime control law and New Jersey's state statute along the same lines. They are used when a witness resorts to the F'ifth Amendment claim that his testimony might incriminate him. The Immunity deciJioo dealt with two types of exemptlm from pn>leCUlloo. One ii known u "use" immunity. This promlaes that a -will DOI be proo- Me~oruu Day Popp~s on Sale By Veteran, Post Veterans cif Foreign Wars from the Harbor Area will sell their famlllar pop.- plea again this Friday and Saturday a.s a prelude to Memorial Day. Joseph H. Casillas, commander of the VF'W Poll 3538 in Colla Mesa, asked the support of all residents, no matter bow they feel about the Vietnam War. · "We may have honest disagreement 11 ta war policy,"' be said, "but we are ctr· talnly all uni~ In the dulre to aid tboae men . Who . have lost their heaJth and JiVellli>Oa',·ana the families of thole who lost their Uvea in VJetnam." Proceedl from the sales of Buddy Pop- pies are '8ppl.ied toward a naUonwide system • ·of· ·VFW·eupported veteran's service offices, a home for orpham of deceased vetuans, entertainment pro- grams at veterans amd mi Ii ta r y hospitals, i(nd direct aid to families of needy veterans. · Casillas urged all Harbor Area citizens to " wear a VFW Buddy Poppy on Memorial Day as a symbol of respect and appreclaUon for the men who have given their lives and health in the service ol thelr country. From PftfJe 1 TIDELANDS • • • beaches is a continuing one in Newport Beach. Residents in West Newport, Balboa ls· land and Balboa Peninsula have erected fences, done landscaping and even bailt piltios on land which is rightfully con- trolled by governmental agencies. To this point, the City Council has been hesitant to take action in encroachment cases. Harbor Island residents are not taking the matter lying down. "We have retained counsel and any action '"e take "'ill depend entirely on his advice," said Newport Beach Realtor John Macnab, fonner president of the Harbor Island Commwllty Association. "I personally think it will take years ol legal action to unravel this whole Ude-- lands ownenhip issue," he added. Macnab was also uncertain as to how the mistaken ownership originated. 'A lot of th is is hindsight but it has been so completely vague it is astotmd· ing." be said. Jn the meantime. county officials see t"'·o alternatives to the encroachment problem. One is to remove all Improvements - including half of the s\vimming pool - and the other is to reach an agreement u•ith. llarbor Island residents sbnilar to the one they had wlthfhe clly . "I think we are going to make it clear in any event that no further development of county tidelands will be allowed," Leaman said. From Pagel REAGAN •.• aram.'' ~an said. Reqan d"rtw cheers from bis audience when be lauded the late J. Edgar ,Hoover at "a very great Amerlcan who built an organization that was tht target of unfair and totally unjusUfied criticism. "No American ever displayed greater dedication to duty or lived up to the finest k1uls of public service than this giant of -. man who directed the FBI for '8 )'ears," Reagan said. ''He was not tolerant of crime. v}olenct or aubverslon and he was never lak~ tn by the lhousaJl\I maal<s t~at criminal• 1nd subversives wear in tbtir coostant •lrort IO corrupt and'destroy our "'11'111 or government and justict," Reagan "Id. ecuted ror anything he says in his own testimony or any evidence ol a crime deriving directly from it. But it does not exempt him from pros· ecution if testimony by other 1vilnesses or .separate evidence links him to a crime. The other, much broader type is known to lawyers a11 "transactional" imn1unlty. This provides he can never be prosecuted for any cri me involved in his testimony. The court upheld "use" immunity in today's two decisions. Justice William O. Douglas, one of the four dissenters in the jury decision, said the decision amounted to "a paring down of civil ri~hts ... that touch mostly the lower castes in our society. I refer, of course, to the blacks, the Chicanos, the one-mule farmers , the a gr i c u l t u r a worken, the off-beat students, the vie· tints of the ghetto." CAIL Y PILOT Sllrt Plllle Justice Thurgood Marshall a I so di ssented, declaring ';today the court cuts the heart out ar two of the most in1· portant and lnsepar8.bie safeguards the Bill of Rights offers a criminal defen· dant : The right to submit his case to a jury and the right to proof beyond a 'Cool Evening' Wins Golden \-Vest College art instructor Darrell Ebert and bis abstract watercolor "La Nieve Fria," won $300 purchase prize Sunday i!l fourth annual New· port Beach Arts Festival. The top award is for work judged best in all classes. Ebert's blue and green painting will hang in city hall. reasonable doubt." Qo Son Tickled, And Wallace's Toes Wiggle Fro1nPage J NIXON •.. ards for a major visiting foreign dig~ nitary. Nixon said before leaving Salzburg, Austria, where he made a 36-bour reat stop in a fairyland castle atmosphere, that he expected the summit talks to be "the most intensive . • • I have ever sn.VER SP-RING, Md. (UPI) _ Doc· participated in on substantive matters." But there were indications the talks tors rePQrted today that George C. might not produCe the · immediate accord Wallace's toes have shown involuntary on arms control that had been expected. ' activity and an aide said that waua·ce's !l'he ride to the Kremlin from the son tickled his father's feet "and his toes airport took about 20 minutes. moved." Closer to the heart of Moscow, the The doctors said the development was sidewalk crowds were three or four "most encouraging." persons deep. They appeared friendly but But they said it was still difficult to were silent. ascertain whether Wallace will rec<iver At. the palace where he is staying in from the paralysis inflicted by a would·be Moscow, Nixon accepted a small glass of assassin's bullets last Monday afternoon. cognac along with other American "Over the past 18 hours there bas been leaders as their Russian hosts toasted some return of involuntary muscular ac· Nixon's health. tivlty to the toes of both feet," said a The Nii:on arrival was seen live on both medical bulletin from doctors at Holy American and Soviet television. The Cross Hospital. Ameican television networks picked up "Gov. Wallace nlul>its normaJ reflex the Russian TV pictures and interposed reaction when the aole of bis foot is their own commentaries. stimulated," the bulletin said. Tass, the official Soviet news agency, .. There is alJo encouraging evidence of also gave unusually fast treatment to the fncrea.sing sensations down to the level of arrival. Tau coiiunented,: "It la dUflcult the mid-thJgb. '11le slgnificance of these to overestimate the significance of this finding u regards to the final degree of visit." recovery from his paralysis i.s difficult to Moscow television devoted 25 minutes ascertain at this time but is most en· to the live arrival ceremonies. couraging." There were a few smiles but no tradi· Elvin Stanton, assistant press secretary tional bearhugs of greeting for ~ixoO to the wounded Alabama governor, said from Kremlin leaders. Premier Alexie Wallace's son, George Jr., 20, visited his Kosygin, hardley a smiler at the best of father SUnday night and burst into times, offered his hand to Nixon. Mrs. Wallace's staff room after the visit Nixon took into both arms a bouquet of sOOutlng: ' red flowers . "I tickled his foot and his toes mo\'ed. Diplomats noted the absence at the Then I held up sheet so he could see it.'' airport of Brezhnev, the leader judged Stanton said. the younger Wallace in-more equal than his equals on the Soviet dicated the governor was pleased with Union's 15-man ruling Polltburo. He had the new development. generally been expected to be present. Billy Joe Camp, Wallace's press About 300 Russian workers, bused to secretary. issued a statement from the airport, dutifully waved U.S. flags but Chilly Wind l(eeps Crowd Home, Tips 11 Sailboats Oillly weekend winds in Newport Beach kept moot beachgoers home and wreaked havoc among small sailboats in Ne"'-port Harbor. Downey Savings Groundbreaking Ends Skirmish Groundbreaking t:eremoniu Tuesday for a new branch of Downey Savings and Loan in Huntington Beach will not only signal the start ol • $400,000 'bulldlng, but the end of a Jo~ controversy. The two-story savings and loan office will be buP,t on the southeast corner ~f Adams A~e and Brookhurst street, property on~e owned by the city of Netvport Beach and planned for a gas station. 11omeowners fought 1he gas station plan and halted Newport Beach plans lo sell the land. They were afraid piecemeal dev:elopment of some 18.5 acres of vacant land might lead to the construction or apartments on part of it. Now, preliminary development plans call for office and professional buildings on most of the land. The Downey Saving• facility ls the first. It will include office space. The cily of HlL'llington Beach approved constructi<':J of the savings and loan of. fice Oct. 20. lt's a two-story building with 13,SOO square feet of office space. Only 46,000 pe<iple visited the ~ Saturday and Sunday compared to crowds of nearly 200,000 the past several "'eekends. "This was really quiet compared to What · we had the last couple of "·eekends," a lifeguard spokesman said today. It was not as quiet in the harbor Sun·: da y as a steady 20-knot wind overturned It sailboats and gave some weekend skip- pers an unexpected bath. The Harbor Department reported today that no injuries -other than lo prides. · and egos -were reported despite the wild sailing weather. TI!e harbor department spokesman allo said seven boats needed towing beeaU!e of mechanical difficulties or wind. damage. : Even ii peopje were not at the beaches; jellyfish were .till there by the huodre<la over the weekend. ' ' "We had about 35 first aid calls and i would say mO!t of them were from stings" the lifeguard SJXlkesmart said. , "l 'm sure the problem \\"Ould have bten te1Tible if "'·e had another big crowd," he said. "We're going to have a long summer if these things stick around much longer," the spokesman added. "Nonnally they are gone by this time.·• 12 Accordions Stolen in Mesa Cornelia Wallace, the governor's V.'ife. did not shout or smile.· "I'm not surprised," she said of the The first talks between Nixon and If a new lZ..member accord.ion band · new development. "I was most optimistic Brezhnev were planned at 1 a.m. PDT Sect Holds Parade turns up in the Harbor Area its fint· all along and 1 thank the people of this Tuesday. booking could be into Costa Mesa City country for their prayers and t hope the y Mrs. Nixon's Tuesday schedule -:alled Jail instead of a music hall. will continue to pray for my husband.'' for a visit to a secondary school, a ride LOS ANGELES (AP) -A 11Parade or William T. Fortner, \\'ho just moved Camp said that despite the doctors' on the rvtosCO\V sub way and a tea. World Peace and Happlness," with from 3108 Coolidge Ave., to 2501 uncertainty about whether \Vallace would Nixon came to 1'.1oscow 84 days after he bagpipe players, lmHation Texas Sunflower Ave .. reported the burglary or recover from paralysis. '"this is the ended the first trip to China by a U.S. longhorn steers and actor Glenn Ford, a dozen assorted Hohner and Contello beginning of movement we "'ere all hop-President and 14 days following his order highlighted a convention by American grand accordions and cases Sunday. : ing for." to blockade by mines No rth Victnam ·s members of an Oriental sect. While 3,500 He said someone beat him back to the Vice President and 1'.1rs. Spiro T. harbors. costumed marchers paraded Sunday garage where $800 worth of belongings Agnew visited Wallace at the hospital this Despite the American·Soviet disrord through the Wilshire District, about the \vere stacked for transfer , making off morning. President Nixon visited him over Vietnam and the Middle East, the same number of convention members with it all. Friday, the day before Jeaving ror successors of Ivan the Terrible, Peter the dressed in white pants.suits with The clean sweep included a 12·foot cop-• itoscow. Great, V.I. Lenin and Josef Stalin took American flags emblazoned on U\e per ship's radar system wave-guide and · Agnew said after his visit that Wallace . ..'.P::•1:::·n::•.::•o:.;p:::u:.:t.::a.:.h::•PP'.:!:Y..:f.::•c::e..:o::n:.:M:::os=co:.:w:::· __ _:•:.:ho::ul::d::e..:r•:...:.w..:at::.c_hed:...:.f_ro_m_•_ldc:e_w_alk::-1. ___ t_h_e_fa_mll....::.Yc...b..:roo.:..:cmc...,c...Fc...o::.r::.tn::.erc...s::al::d:.:. __ _ "looked extrerDeJy well." 1· "The governor is very alert and talking a Jot about politics," Agnew told reporters. "I congratulated him for his primary victories last week in Maryland and Michigan." The vice president said he did not discuss with Wallace the governor's im· proved condition.· But Agnew said of Wallace: 'He's going lo fight this thing and come out of it all right. 1 honestly thought he looked extremely well. He u·as alert and seemed cheerful." Firm Appealing Unit Rejection The Donald L. Scholtz Company has appealed the Newport Beach Planning Commission's rejection or ill propo.oed 'Ill-unit addition to Venallles on the Bluffs 1portmenll to the CUy Council. A pubUc bearing on the appeal will lake place June 12 at 7:30 p.m. in Cily Hall. Representatives of the builder claim that lhe commlasion ra!led to act In accordance "'ith an existing 11plannlng 1 community" ordinance approved for the 20-acrc tract that designates the ·~ proved den.sl\y. It was the 3S dwelling unlla per acre tbal commlsslonera ol>Jtcttd to, ttllin& Ulo cleWoper to bring blck plana f1ll' a pn>J«I about ball the denally orig!D- lllly ~ j Beautiful Dia1nond Rings Qt Big Savi1igB1 . •t11M ,_., °"' .... .... ( . LA011S $225 5110 WIOOING ANO IMOAOIMINT a1NC In' e1r~ 1ty ... i/S ct, 11 .. mor.d • '" lft ,..11ow .. Id. lAOllS $185 '75 DOM u.cm WIOOINO AllO INNlllMIWT .... flT 1/J Cl. 1111 .. l'fleM • k°l-'IU. ..... l.ADllS $165 s55 OUR MOST WIDOINe MID IN9AOllMl"1' llNe IKT Cm'!lt'r llllla"*lllll .::,,..,..... ~ I an1111 1111~ liltlil 1/J UNUSUAL (!. "" "' ... • U.Dllf $155 'SO DIAMOND WIDDINe AlfO IMN•IMIMT 1ttM• llT (lirittr dl•"*11111 .............. ~ ~ lt .,,. ..... ,,....,, ,., ••• (t •• lft "' ...... GUAllANTll UOlll $275 5135 WIOOtH• AND lwe.t.•UStf'r llQ ''"''' 1111_i.ll'llllllll 11' ct. 1r11J1 a fll'ltlt ... ,,.,,.. tet11 w1. A • When yov &... .. 1 ~ .. d . 11'1 wtiH• ..,w. •vr WI mond from ut .,. wfll Choose from over 125 wedding rfllCJ sets. Also Ian)• selection of t that di II I guaron M llnOnd so ta res. at 40'k MORE lhan ,..., 'COSTA MESA JEWELRY & LOAN paid1or1t.;,_._, , I ck. Can fO" de ~ '"II 1l-h1ro? COMPARE. • " . ' ·' .' ' ~ "' .~: ... J I r I I I . -·--.,,---. -.. -.._.,.-..,, ~ -.. _,,.. __ • Orange Coast Teday's n..J N.Y. Stoeb VOL 65, NO. 143 , 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, MAY 22, 1972 c TEN CENTS Reagan Calls for Vote on Death Penalty Ban By TOM BARLEY ot 111t 0.11, root 111t1 Gov. Ronald Reagan today In Anaheim urged "every Californian with a con-. science" to sign a petition that would put the restoration of capital punishment in· IUative on the ballot in November, "Reagan told the annual meeting of the California Police Officers Association in Disneyland Hotel that "lhe state owes you the fullest protection in a duty that da~y becomes more hazardous. Kleindienst "I see that 125 lawmen were killed In the line of duty in this country last year. Twenty-three lawmen and correctional officers have died in California since January, 1971, 11 Reagan .said. "One is too many," Reagan declared to the cheers of the standing J~wmen. "I want a mandatory first degree murder trial for anyone who kills a Police officer," the governor said. "A bill to this effect has passed the state Senate and is now before the Assembly and I urge the Tapping Answer -. To Gang Crime? Crediting electronic 'u r v e i 11 a n c e teehnique1 as the an.!Wtr, Acting U.S. At· torney General Richard Kleindienst today predicted that America will cripple and totally control organized crime within three to four years. He-did not mention any specific ethnic r;roups er indJvkluala, but left litUe doubt in bll refereaoot. durlnc lhl Clllfomla .Peace Officera' Allociation convention opoech at the DISllOYland Hotel. .. A. MlilrDl M tdou1, nu, avaricJous men who lhlnk nothing of murder, e1· tortion, and perjury have become a grow. ing malignancy in American society," he declared. "But measures pressed by this Administration among which electronic surveillance figures prominently have put t,IOO of these top crime figures out of business," Kleindiemt charged. "We have eliminated half of the lwlenhip of 'the families' and It is my prediction that in thrte to four years we will have this cana!f completely under our control," be added. Kleindienst aaid be differed with Governor Reagan's earlier appeal for the restoration of the death penalty "in the R:DSe lb.at I believe we can only have limited capital punishment whether it be in caJUomia or anywhere else. "By that I mean the death penalty for political assassination, the killing of an on duty police officer and the majority of premeditated murder," Kleindienst said. "I don't believe and I never have that we can include crimes of passion in the category advocated today by Gov. Reagan,'' the acting federal attorney general said. Kleindienst predicted the d e c I i n e "within a very few years" o( the drug problems "that have achieved auch tremendous proportions in our society to. day. "1111 my belle! that the Vietnam war Angola Airplane Crash Kills 20 y,·hich has so distressed the youth of our nation has been a prime factor In so many young people turning to drugs as an escape," Kleindienrt aaid. He blamed "a nation Uuit sent 500,000 young men wbo were never toJd why they were there 8,000 miles to fight a war while the people at home were told that that war didn't Uisl" Bui Kleindl..i fell that tho ·"Inevitable solution" of that war will uaber In an era in which young people wifl turn from mug, with the '-IJlltlon that "Ibey have become one of the great.est evllll in our society." Gherman Enters l11nocent P"lea In Swind"le Case Dr. E. Mortimer Gherman, Barry Goldwater Jr.'1 father·i~law, and two associates has pleaded Innocent in con4 nection with land swindle charges filed by the San Bernardino district attorney 's of. fice. Dr. Gherman. a prominent Newport Beach businessman, John A. "Pat" Pat· terson, and James Moreland, all officials of Mountain Lakes Development Corp., were released on $10,000 bail Friday, each pending a preliminary hearing June 12 in San Bernardino Superior Court. Dr. Gherman, whose daughter wed the son of U.S. Sen. Barry ~I. Goldwater March 30, couJd not be reached for com· ment on the charges. Neither Patterson nor Moreland were available, either. Telephones at their office in San Bernardino have been dUconnected. Gherman, Patterson and Moreland were charged Thursday with 10 counts of grand theft In connection with the aale of lots near Big Bear known as Mountain View Estates. In addition, Gherman and Patterson were eached charged with 40 counts of false and misleading advertising and 19 LOBITO An la (UPI) Twenty conuls each of falling to adhere to a ' go -Calllornia Real Estate Commission order persons were killed when the pilot of an Angola Airline1 twin-engine turboprop to stop selling the lots. airliner overshot the runway at Lobito Deputy San Bernardino County District airport In dense fog and crashed into the Attorney Charles Wolre said today the the airline announced. charges stemmed from complaints in- se.rtie F27 Friendship plane, carrying 19 itiated by the Real Est~te Commission. passengers and four crewmen -all He said the corporation allegedly sold Pottuguese -was on-• scheduled m0tn,._ 133 lots _to persons telling them that Ing flight Sunday from Luanda to Sa Da utilities had been installed, when they Bandelr• in South Angola with its first hadn't been. stop in Lobito .men the crash occurred, Wolfe said the real ~late involved was tbe Pcrtuguese nen agency ANI said. valued at $1.1 million. Planners Disapprove support of every Californian for this vital measure." Reagan told more than 500 top California lawmen that the state Supreme Court threw out more than 200 years of legal precedent when It dumped the death penalty earlier tb.la year. "It reversed Its own decision on the same case four years ago and did nothing by its very act to restore any standing it ever had with the people ol C&llfornla," Reagan said. The governor said another top priority of Californians "both in terms or pro- tecting the public and easing the burden on lawmen" was 1 Jong overdue crackdown on pushers and dealers in drugs and narcotics. 0 More than 99,000 adults and 36,000 minors were arrested for drug offenses in 1970," Reagan said. "More than 1,000 deaths in Los Ange.I.es County alone were caused in that year by "drug addiction." Reagan called for a "stiff upward rez nev ' l'fVision" or the jail term meted out to drug dealers and public support for what he called "a new 11.nd comprehensive drug abuse treatment program ... that will divert the first lime user or possessor of drugs ay,•.iy from our jails and prisons." Reagan said participants in the unique program will be given the opportun ity "to share in treahnent programs dl"slgned 10 keep them from becoming addicted and restore them to a normal productive rea PRls1DENT.N1xoN ANo SOVIP. PR,Es10EH°i-·..oOootililv <~Em 1N· Moscow Light Momon! Sha rod All•~ P.._ido nt's Arr Iv al ~I Vntikovo fl ·-'lrport UllT ........ . Wallace's Toe s Tickled; Some Mo vement Noted SILVER SPRING, Md. (UPI) -Doc· finding as regan!J to the final degree of tors reported today that George C. recovery from his paralysia is diHicult to Wallace's toe! have shown involuntary ascertain •t this ume but ii most e~ couraging." activity ud an aide said that Wallace's Elvin Stanton, wist.ant preta secretary Mn tickled his father's feet "and his toes to the wounded Alabama governor, said moved." Wallace'• aon, George Jr., 20, visited hJs 'The doctors said the develoPment was father Sunday night and burst Into "most encouraging." Wallace's stall room after the visit, shouting: But they said it was rtill dlUicult to .. 1 tickled his foot and bll toes lfllOVed. ascertain whether Wallace will recover Then I held up 1heet ao be could aee tt." from the paralysis inflicted by a would-be Stanton said the younger Wallace in. assassin's bullet& last Monday afternoon. dic.ated the governor was pleased with "Over the paSt 18 houn there has been the new development. some return of involuntary muscular ac· tivity to the toes of both feet," said a Biiiy Joe Camp, Wallace11 press medical bulletin from doctors at Holy iecretary • issued a 1tatement from Cross Hospital. Cornella WalJace, the governor'• wife. "Gov. Wallace exhibits norma1 reflex: "I'm not surpri~,ed," ahe aaid .of the reaction when...the...aol! ot .biJ..Joot_is _Eew deve.l.~ent. _! was moat o.e!!._ml!t.!c stimulated," the bulletin said. an aliing ~ tliinlt tht people of th11 "There is also encouraging evidence of country for their prayers and I hope ~~ Increasing sensations down to Utt level of will continue to pray for my h\,ll!lband. the mid-thigh. The significance of these Camp 1ald that despite the doctors' uncertainty about whether Wallace would recover from paraJysis, "thJJ is the beginning of movement we were all hop- ing for." Vice Preoiden~ and Mrs. Spiro T. 200 Arrested In. Storming Of Pen tagon WASHINGTON (AP) -Demonstrators attempted to enter the Pentagon today , shortly after their Iega1 permit to dem· 0111trate expired but were repulsed by po1ice. About 100 building guard1 pushed back the head of tbe ragged column ol pro- tuters and began makin( arresll. Among those taken Into custody were u- tiwar leaders David Dellinger and Father James Gropp!. (See earlier story, Page 4). At nr1t there was little violence u guard1 blocked the forward push and begin hauling off demonatrators one by one. But a1 the effort continued, guards were leen dragging Mme demonstrators to a walling bus by the hair. PoUce said more thin 200 demonstra- tors were ane1te<t. Leaders of the demonatration using a megaphone repeatedly uraed the crowd , to move forward "&ently and persi.stently'' and not attempt to storm the building. Only a fracllon ol the group tried to enter the building. 'Ibey were stopped in the ntiddle o( the street outskle. Mesa Bar ·Faces Obstacle I Agnew visited Wallace at the hospital this morning. President Nixon visited him Friday, the day before lea•inC for Moscow. Another group 11t down In tbe 1trett. while still others lllood .,Ide and watched. A few rocks were thrown from the crowd In the direction of guards and newsmen stand!nR: on the Pentagon steps. 'nle Costa Mesa planning department Iliff h&J recommended against the rt0penlng of a l lllh Street beer bar w~lch hat been knOwn 1t varf001 Umes ll "Tbe Honeybuckfi/' ''The Outer Ltmfts'' and "Earth.'' Dion E. !llarsh, -owner of the bar al 77S 11th St.. will ,..k a """' exception from the planning conunlsaloo tanlCbt. Ht wants to put the rock mUllc pal1<e beck Jn bu.'llness. He has requesttd a reduction of the ""' quired um alte parking -In ... cl!lllllC for U tqUal amount al putiDg about 130 feet north of the buUdinr. City plannlng aides say his proposai would not provide adequ1 it pprklnl for bar palrOill. They have """'1lllell(ed against IL Police 11re also against the reduction and claim inadequate Pllklnc was one of the major troublu wltb prSoi' bars at the same location. Bef<rt it clo.led In •·ebruary, "Earth" rteelvtd numerous viltts from Corti Mesa pollce ..., complaints from ruldenta about tbt loudness of tbt rock music btJnc plaJ<d tbert. II ,.., allo tllo scene of several arrtsls for anea:ed narcotics violations. Earlier ibis year the new owner had re-- quested a transfer of the bar'• beer license, but ran )lllo trouble from the Olsta Mesa Cl!Y; ~. Councilmen pn>fested tbt 1"""'" trans!tT with the Al0>hollc BeYOralf (illltrol Buuau. Marsh meanwblll bn withdrawn his beer llcms< ....-~ dalnu he will Stll only IOI! drllb' ~,. llit <110Ulh bUline51 to •arrait ~ ~Jcallon for the Uctnse. t "(' • Agnew ,.Id alter hll visit that Wallace ••Jooked extremely well." "The·govtm0r II very alert and talking a lot about poliUca," Agnew. told nr,:rten1. 'I congratulat.d him for hll primary victorle1 lut ..,..k In !llaryland and Mlctllgan." The vice president said he did mt dlscuu with Wallace the covemor•1 Im· proved condition. But Ain<W 11ld of Wallace: 'He'a golnt_to fllbt this thine al!(! <:omt eU! (jf; It Ill i!iht-I honatly thought he loolted txtrtmely well. lk was alert and lftmed cl>eerful." • , I OUt>lde the waUll """°' two Vlttnam veteram Agiinst the War &urned a gretn army coat and a sreen ann1 shlrl to the cbeer1 of the crowd. "Tbat11 four ye1r1 of my life goin(up tn names ," one o: tMm 111d u the crowd sat on e macadam parking lot outalde \be buUdtn1. Alger:ia Has Visitor ALOIERll1 \\latrl1 MP> -l'rtlldenl H1bib Bourtultio of Tuni1i1 arrived hm loday for a -t·1 off1tlal •isll. plact in society." Rtagan said he partlcuJarly welcomed what will bt "the musive use of citizen voluntttrs to help me-et a mounting social problem. ..\Ve hope that we can reach th' poten· lial young addict rar n1ore effectively than Rny institutional rehabilitation pro- gram," Rl"agan said. Re3gan drew che<'rs from his audience \\'hen he-lauded thl' late J. Edgar (St' REAGAN, l,age 1) 2 Leaders .Hold First Major Talk ~10SCOW (AP) -J>resi<lcnt Nixon held the first of hi's su rnmit stsSions wllh Leonid I. Brezhllev tonight. and then told the Russia~ and the world that he has come to Moscow to "make pcnceful cooperation 1 reality." Brezhnev, the Communist party chief. was not at tM airport to greet President and li-1r.i. Nixon. He also wu ·ab8ent rrom a receptJon Tlhlch followed ooon after the Nbwnl drove to the Kttm1in ol ll'OUnd 15 mlleo an hour, pul ll10 cranlq necko c( Mu.ocovlle! . Tbo two leaden fol together later. Nix· on'• national security alfelr1 adviser, Henry A. Kiuinler, sat ln on the ses1lon, according to.a Wblta Houte l(>Oteoman. Moscow televiaion uld the President and Brezhnev had a talk of a frank and businesslike character. In a toast prepared for an official din- ner hosted by Soviet leaders. Nixon uld: ''The American people want peace. I know the peopl.. of the Soviet Union want peace. My fervent hope ii that we, u repruentatJves of our two peoples, can work together to insure that all the people of the earth can enjoy the: bleu- ings of peace." The Preskfent appeered at !he banquet rour hours after arriving to a cordial if somewhat .uH welconte by Soviet of. ficialdom. After that he aped to the Kremlin, ana more than 1 o o , o o o Muscovites had a chance to see the first American president to visit Moscow. The airport greeting was restricted to members or the government. Whllt Brezhnev was not among the grteter11, Nixon will be doing most of the week's talking with hlm. "We should recognize that great nuclear powers have a so I em n responslbllity to exerci8e restraint in any crisis, and to take po!litive action to avert direct ·confrontation," Nixon aaid Jn hl1 dinner remark!. "With great power goes gr ea t responsibility. Jt i..s preeistly when J)OWtr ts oot accompanied by respomlbility that the peace la threatened. Let oor power elway1 be used to keep the peace, never to break it.". Nixon made no direct mtntion of tht Vietnam war, but at least one phrase could be applied to the Soviet IJnlon'• role as an anna 1Uppller for Hanoi : "We >hould recognize further that It i• th• responsibility of great powera to In. nuence other natk>nt tn conflict or crlaI. IS.. NIXON, Pace li ....... Weadler h1ort IUnlhine on the· agenda for Tuesday with continued warm temperatun:a. HiehJ at the btache1 62 rlsing to 72 in the Inland arus. Lowa 48-53. INSmE TOD-'Y Tht Co1Ia M•w Cilllc Plau· ho u 1 c... and ih1 Hvntlnoton Brac h PlauhoUlt kt~ op<ntd lhtlr arC!S01>Closfng t>f<iilticl!onl over the 10tekmd. BotJJ.J are re- oitwtd today. Stt Enltrlalll- nunt, Paac1 J3·l9. L.M. Im ' -, .. ,, ...... .. .. ....... , ..... • Call"'*• I -·-" Cl••lllt' ..... ,,. ..... """' " -u -,, .. ·-.. '""' _,... ,.." --" .. ,_ .. ,.,..,,_. .... • _,... .. ,, •. _...,,,.._.... , ... , --• ·-, .. ,, -· ... " MltMc-" ---· ..... ,,.,. ... ..._ 11 ---• i NEW VICE CHANCELLOR UCl's Hazard Ad1ms Hazard Adams Appointed UCI Vice Chancellor Dr_.Hazard Adams, dean of the school of humanities at UC Irvine, has been a~ pointed Vice chancellor of academic af- fairs. Announcement of the action hy the UC Board or Regents was made jointly by UC President Charles J. llitch and UCI Chancellor Daniel G. Aldrich, Jr. Dr. Adam1 81tccee<1s Dr. Hogger W. Russell who resigned to become chief e1- erotive officer of F1lnders University of South.Australia earJier·thls spring. Dr. Adatll!I, an expert en literary theory • and 20th ~Century Anglo.Irish literature, joined the UCI faculty in 19&4 and served as founding chairman of the department of English for five years. He was named dean of humanities two and one-half years ago. Earlier, .he had taugh_t at Michigan Stale UnlvCrsity, CO rile II University, and the UniversJty of Texas. A graduate of Princeton University. he earned m:ister of arts and doctoral degrees at the Vnive"1ty of Washington. He . ia-the auUlor of two novels, "The Truth-Abou_t Dragone: An Antl-Romance1' and "The Horse& .ef lnstruct.lon," and seveial other book!:, including "Blake and Yeats: The Contrary Vision," "William Blake: A·Reading of the Shorter Poema," .. The Coriteits of Poetry" and "The Interests of Ctltlcism." Tl>e . UCI Friends of the Library net~ oelected "The Truth about Dragobl" al one of the ottt!tandlng books written by . Orange County authors in 1971. . '. .. . 12 ·.Accordions Stolen in Mesa If a new 12-member accordion band turns up in the Harbor Area its first booking could be into Costa Mesa City Jail Instead of a music hall. Will lam . T. Fortner, who just moved from 3108 Coolidge Ave., to 2501 Sunflower Ave .. reported the burglary of a dozen assorted Hohner and Contello &rand accordions and cases Sunday. He said someone beat him back to the garage whei-e $800 worth or belongings were stacked for transfer, making off with it all. The clean swttp included a 12-foot cop- J>eI'-Shlp's radar system wave-guide and the family broom , Fortner said. Saturn Lines Struck OAKLAND (UP!l -About 165 pilots struck Saturn Airways Sunday \\'hen con- tract negotiations broke down. A Saturn spokesman said it was too early to predict the effect of the walkout on the supplemental airline, which concentrates (In the dome!tic charter market. The company aaid it would make other book· ings for pusengers on vacation and scheduled to relum via Saturn. OU.N61 COAn CM DAILY PILOT TNOnllH Cee1t D.Alt.Y l"ILOT, wt1t1 .... ~ h COl'l'lbll'IN ,,._ H..,_,,., .. k -l~ W t11e Of"IH!Oe eo.st Pvbllttilnl' eom.nr. s.,... r111-e1111ior. .,. ,.-.~ Mtnf1r thl'Olllli. Fr"ily, llt C11l1 ~ N....-n ~ H""ll""'I°" BNCl\/Foun111n v11i.r, L-OllNI 8odl, lrvlnw"S.Oclllbldr Mid Sin ci.r-.i.1 1111 J11• (lp!Jlr-. A •l11111t' NllllMI . .d1ti11n I~ PUbJl....S S.l_.)'I. M1111 Stmcl1ya. n~""Ji1r'i(r,.r PU6fWi 1U11t hlliio WP..t Bay Slf"fft• a.t• MIN. Qllfo1'1'1i., ntlf. lt•L•rf N. W..4 r'rftldtnr 1nd ........,.. J1ck It. Citrl•Y Vice '"'-'*"' W °'""111 ~ Tllorn11 k•1vll ~df,.. Tller1111 A. Mw,ltf" MltlCllt.9 lt:dl!W Ch1rf" H. l•o• lJclteN '· Helt Al~llMI M--.-. ~-­ ____.C:... .... -OflM JlO W11t l•y Str•1t M1rll*fi AMn11: P.O. lex 1160, t2621 --~ '-clt.1 ml.......,...,.,..,., ..._.e: m Af911'A.....,.. MIMll"I*" : : 1..ctt .... ,,.,.. $11'1 tlll'Mnll~ &a '"""" AMI ., T .. .,.,. 11141 '4MU1 Cl•WW A.._T' I 1 Ml .. 611 Cllil'Yrlf!lt, 1'71. °"'* C-.t ""*"'"' c~. w. _.,. .--. 11t1rt'""""-1111_..1 JNttw • .. • .,.......... ..... _, .............. ..,. """"' ,... fl'llMlllll ., ...,.,.., ...... ~ s..... <MM ... ,... "" .. Clllf'I ,,.... CM1'9nlk ~-w Pn1W .... ~: .., .INI II.II ,..IM'I "8fwy -· t .... lllllflllltr• ' , Mondq, M11 22, 1972 Criminal Ca11e11 Split Decisions Upheld by Court WASHINGTON (UPI ) -The Supreme Court in a 5-4 vote held today that a state may permil con victions in criminal cases by less than a unanimous vote of the 12- man juries. The decision came In cases from Louisiana and Oregon. U n a n i m o u s verdicts are required in federal courts and most other slates. Under Oregon's constitution, 10 of 12 jurors may return a verdict of guilty ex- cept in murder cases. The Louisiana practice under both law and the state constitution allows con· viction by nine of 12 jurors , except when the defendant could be sentenced to death in addition. Unanlmlty i.3 required in less 1eriowi cases tried by five-man juries. Texu, Montana, Idaho and Oklahoma allow less than unanlmowi verdicts for minor offense!. In another case today, the court upheld the constitutionality of federal and stste immunity la\VS used to require a \vilness to give evidence or face jail for con- tempt The statues are used as a major weapon in the \rar on organized crin1e. The S.2 ruling came in test cases challenging the immunity provi!ion of the 1970 federal crime control law and New Jersey's state statute along the sam e lines. They are used \\"hen a \Vitncss resorts to the Fifth Amendment claim that his t.estimony might incriminate him. The immunity decision dealt with two types of u.emption from prosecution. One is known as "use" immunlty. This promises that a. witness will not be pros- ecuted for anything he says in his own testimony or any evidence of a crime deriving directly from ii. But. it does not e.xempt him from pros- ecution if testimony by othei: witnesses or -sepitate evidence links him to a crime. Memorial Day Poppies on Sale Bx Veteran Post Veterans of Foreign Wars from the Harbor Area will sell their familiar pop- pit1 .again thiJ Friday and Saturday as a prelude-to Memorial Day. Joseph H.1 Casillas, commander of the VFW Post 3538 in Coata Mesa, asked the support of all r~dents, no matter how they f~l about the Vietnam War . "We may ~ave bonest disagreement as to )¥ar policy,'~ he aaid, "but we are cer- taip!y all 1111lted '11 the desire to aid those men who have lost their health and ifvetthood, and the families of those who lost their lives in Vietnam." Proceeds from the sales of Buddy Pop- pies are applied toward a nationwide system of VFW-supported veteran 's service offices, a home for orphans of deceased veterans. entertainment pro- gram! at veterans amd m J I i t a r y hospitals, and dlrttt aid to families of needy veterans. Casillas urged all Harbor Area citizens to wear a VFW Buddy Poppy on Memorial Day as a symbol of respect and appreciation for the men who have given their lives and health in the service or their country. No Ha1·111; No Fo11I The other, muc h broader type is known to lawyers as '·transactional" immunity. This pro vides he can never be prosecuted for any crime involved in his testimony. The court upheld "use" immunity in today's two decisions. Justice William O. Douglas, one of the four dissenters in the jury decision. said the decision amounted to '"a paring dO\\'D or civ il rights ... that touch mostly the 101rer castes Jn our society. I refer, of course, to the blacks, the Chicanos, the one·mule farmers, the a gr i c u It u r a workers. the off-beat studenls, the vic- tims of the ghetto." Justice Thurgood Marshall also dissen ted, declaring "today the court C1;1ts the heart out of two of the most un4 portant and inseparable safeguards the Bill of Rights offers a criminal defen- dant: The right to submit his case to a jury and the right to proof beyond a reasonable doubt." Nevada Judge Ref uses License To Ba,vdyhouse VIRGINIA CITY. Nev. (AP) -A District Court judge in this one-time silver mining community has refused to order licensing of a house of prostitution, saying to do 50 would "demean the stature of the court." Judge Frank Gregory declined to grant a reque!t in a suit filed by Irene York, who . contended the Storey County yam. mission created a monopoly by licensing only one house of prostitution-;-Joe Con- forte's well-known and popular ~fustang ranch. Gregory noted at the end or a day·long hearing in the 96-year-old coorthouse that the state legislature had given counties "the authority within their discretion to license this somewhat disreputable business." He said Miss York, in effect, asked him to license a house of prostitution. He said be would not do so. Storey Dist, Atty. Virgil Buechianeri, In bis closing arguments, told the court Miaa Yark'• action rei--esented probably ''the first time that someone has asked a court for sanction to operate a brothel." From Pagel REAGAN ... Hoover as "a very great American who built an organization that was the target of un£air and totally unjustified criticism. "No American ever di!played greater dedication to duty or lived up to the finest ideals of public service than this giant or a man who directed the FBI for 48 years," Reagan said . "He was not tolerant of crime, violence or subversion and he wa9 never taken in by the thousand ma!ks that criminals and subversives \\'ear in their constant effort to corrupt and destroy our system of government and justice," Reagan said. CUban Premier' Fidel Castro and a Bulgarian basketball player gnpple for ball during friendly game in Sofia. Game took place durillg Cas\ro's ei ght-day official visi t to Bulgaria. He ls currenUy on..10...Uoo tour o! Africa and Eastern Europe and ls e.xpected to vWt Ibo Solvet Union after President NiJ<on leave.. • Anothe1· Nixon . Travels Richard Nixon, nephe\v of the Preside~t Jl'.!eets Liberia_n Y?Ungsters during visit to Firestone rubber plan tat10~ in Rarbel, L1ber1_a. Young Nixon, son of ri-tr. and Mrs. F. Donald Nixon, 1016 \Vest\v1nd 'Vay, Newport Beach, currently is a student on tour \\•ith Chapman Col· lege's World Campus Afloat. l'ro111 lfage 1 NIXON .•. to moderate their behavior," Nixon noted that world attention was .,primarily directed to the possibility of an initial limitation of strategic arms." other matters for negotiation here, be said, include mutually be n e f i c i al economic cooperation and collaboration in the exploration of space, the conquest of, disease and imprpvem~nt _of the en- vironment. ''We will, have our different interests and our different approaches and neither of us will be reluctant to point them out," the President observed. But the foundation of healthy com· petition must be a willingness to cooperate and reciprocate on matten of oven-iding importance, he added. "Thia week can prove that the era or negotiation between the two most powerful nations in the world has begun," he said. A!J the President put it, agreement in curbing strategic arms "could begin to turn our countries away from a wasteful and dangerous arms race and toward more productilfl for J1e4ce." II the summl\ nefltil!llioh show a pos- itive attitude on this and other bilateral questions. he said, "fresh impetus will be given to the resolution of other issues in other areas or the world. "Let us remember as we begin to lift the burden of armed confrontation from both our peoples, we shall lift the hopes f91'..peace of all the peoples of the world," Nixon concluded. "Never have two peoples had a greater challenge or greater goal. Let WI be worthy of the hopes of the SOviet people, the American people and all tbe people on this earth as we work together toward the goat of a peaceful world .'' Judge Smnner Slated As Speaker in Mesa Bruce \V. Sumner, presiding judge at Ora nge Cou nty Superior Court, u·iJI be the gu est speaker Wednesday night dur- fng a public lecture at the Mardan School of Educational Therapy in Costa l\.fesa. Judge Sumner ·s talk will focus on the rela tionship between law and family life. For reservations contact the J\.fardan Murder Victim Found in. Tub OAKLAND (AP) -Firemen re- ~pond to a blaze at a $50,000 home in the Oakland Hilts found an apparent murder victim s.lttlng fully-clothed In an upstaln bathtub. Oakland..bo'm.ic.ide inspector Rol>- ert Warren said the case was one of "arson and homicide" but de· clined to discuss details, inclliding the cause of death. The unidentified victim was de- scribed as a man in hi! late 20s. Skin Diver Dies After Rescue Try in Newport .Drowning has been established u the cause ofl deatb at a 211>-pound Downey skin diver pulled from the surf off Cor- ona de! Mar shortly before midnight Saturday. Melvin G. Pardee, 28, was given mouth- to-mouth resucitation and then flown to Hoag Memorial Hospital by the Newport Beach police helicopter, \11here he was dead on arrival. Corooer's deputies said they at first suspected a possible coronary attack due to the 5 foot, JO-inch truck driver's heavy build but an autopsy showed be drowned. Tnvestlgators said Pardee's diving com- panions, David Lilva and Greg Moger, also of Downey, were llruggting to bring hlm ashore when they reached the scene. A by!Under, James A. Martin, of Ana- heim, began adminlstering first aid while awaiting the helicopter and a fire de- partment tearn , po!.lce said. Sail Vessel Overdue SAN JUAJI, P.R. (AP) -A 23-foot '8il- lng vesael with five persons aboard is overdue on an Atlantic crossl11g that be. gan in Portuguese Cape Verd, lslands. The U.S. Coast Guard !aid Sunday that ~fr. and f\.frs. Allan McAllister, and thtir two daughters, aged 4 and 1S months . and Brent Sleven of Los Angeles are aboard the boat. The McAUisters are U.S. citizens but their address is not known, a Coast Guard 1pokesm1n said. S upervi-sor Proposes Preserve ThJrd District County S u P e r v i ! 0 r William J. Phillips today proposed th• establishment of an open space preserve in the Chino Hllls area north of Yorba Linda lllld east of Brea. Phillips has rese rved time at 10 .a.n1, Tuesday on the Board ol Superv1.~r.s agenda to present his plan for a feas1 b1l~­ ty study of the proposed open space proJ· ect 'vhich 'vould invoh•e up to 17,000 acres. The property in question includes 2.~ acres earmarked for the proposed Chu'lO. Hills Regional Airport which Phi!lips s~id should not be given further cons1derat10n by the county. Friday, hundreds of letters were mail~ to Phillips' COMtitutent.. in the Third District explainng the propol!lal. The supervisor said today the project would involve land in Riverside and San Bernardino counties as well a.s Orange C.OUnty and is located roughly between Brea and Yorba Lirxla and Corona and Chino. Phillips said in the letter that his pro- posal \vas· an answer to a recom· mendaton by the Yorba Linda City Coun· cil. Councilmen pointed out that there are no plans for a \l-'ilderness park in northeastern Orange Cou nty at thi! time. The Federal A\•iatkln Administration has called for written comments on 1 modified plan for the Chino Hills airport. Phillips has asked the FAA to schedule another public hearing to be held in the Third District on the airport. A hearing was held Feb. 3 in Placentia and the airport project was vigorously opposed by residents and officials of Yorba Linda. Brea, Placentia and 1 Fullerton. Since then backers of tht airport proj· ject havl! r_educed t~~ size in hopea ot ~ dampening the opposition and to conform ~ to FAA regulations on use of air space in the Los Angeles Basin. 2 Die of Auto l11jmies; Total For County 96 A housewife and 1 young man have lost two and 1ix-wffi: fights for llfe, becomm, the 9Stb and '8th traffic accident fataUUea of the current year in Orange County. ; Victims were Identified u Mrs. Lor- raine Baker, of 12891 Tr.,sk Ave., Garden .• Grove and Terry Stars, 20, of FullerloJ1. , Sears was injured 1l:1: weeks ago when •. hil car 1werved and spun oft Tonner Can-,\ yon Road near the Orange Freeway ' overpau and overturned. He succumbed Friday at St. Jude ~ Hospital in Fullerton, while Mrs. Baker :.- died at St. Joseph's Hospital in Orange the same day from her injuries. She was standing in her front yard two ~ weeks igo when a four-wheel trailer .•. broke loose from a truck, careened over the curb and ran her down . Investigators said a hitch and safety chain connecting the trailer and truck driven by Thomas W. Moore, 33. of 1755 Shm-y Lane, Santa Ana , broke t.nd caused the accident. Burglary Tip Proves ' False in Costa Mesa A vigilant citlzen'a lip relayed by Santa Ana police l!tnt Costa Me1a officers rac- ing to a po!sible burglary in progress .· early Sunday. The false alarm at 1260 Logan Ave., called in about 2 a.m. involved men hustl· ing in and out of a warehouse and loadins merchandise into a van. Officer Mark Bernal discovered they were newspaper distributors getting the Sunday paper out onto the stands. Beciiitiful-Diamond Rings at Big Savings •l!•lt .... .., OUR ..... ~••c• UOllS $225 s110 WEOOIN& ANO INOACllMINY llHG SIY a1roque 11'1'1• • 1/S ct. dltmonct • •fl lit vtllow 111111. 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